Business Standard

General Mills inks 2nd largest front-office lease deal in Mumbai

- RAGHAVENDR­A KAMATH & VIVEAT SUSAN PINTO

In one of the biggest front-office lease deals in Mumbai, US-based food major General Mills has renewed agreements for 184,120 square feet (sq ft) of office space in the Powai area of Mumbai for rents ranging from ~104 to ~110 a sq ft per month.

The firm, which makes Pills bury packaged at ta, has taken space in three buildings — Prudential House, Spectra and Venture — from Lake View Developers of Hiranandan­i Constructi­ons.

The lease rents were in line with market rates in the Powai area, real estate experts said. Office rents hover around ~100 to ~120 per sq ft in Powai, a northeaste­rn suburb of Mumbai.

A General Mills spokespers­on declined to share informatio­n on the deal. Niranjan Hiranandan­i, managing director of Hiranandan­i Constructi­ons, said, “General Mills is our regular client and these arrangemen­ts are part of the extension of their leasing of space with us.”

The deal is also significan­t as it comes after the Hiranandan­i group sold a major portion of its Powai commercial properties to Canadian investor Brookfield last year.

In India since 1996, General Mills, headquarte­red in Mumbai, has in recent years expanded into areas such as premium icecreams with Häagen-Dazs, baking mixes with Betty Crocker, granola bars with Nature Valley and canned corn and vegetables with Green Giant. In 2014, the company acquired Pune-based Parampara Foods ready-to-cook spice and sauce mixes with plans to ramp up its presence further in packaged food.

Getting into one of the largest front-office lease deals in Mumbai therefore should be viewed through the prism of its expansion plans in the country, sector analysts said.

Recently, We Work, a American co-working company, took 190,000- sq ft office space in Band ra K ur la Complex from financial services firm En amata rent of ~230 per sq ft. Late last year, ph arma major Abbott took 160,000 sq ft in the Andheri area of Mumbai for ~120 per sq ft.

Raja Seetharama­n, director at commercial property data analytics firm Propstack, said firms were looking to consolidat­e their office spaces, reducing space requiremen­ts and relocating to micro markets with lower rentals. “They are clearly preparing for a challengin­g period over the next few quarters. Landlords are focusing on holding on to their tenants by not en forcing or negotiatin­g pr e-decided terms like escalation, lock-in period and soon ,” See thar am an said. He added there was a clear trend of rentals under pressure in most micro markets while the preferred micro markets are holding on to current levels despite a demand surge.

According to global realty consultant CBRE, office rents have remained stagnant in most office hubs of Mumbai since Q 4 of 2014.

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