Business Standard

Pre-leased commercial space sales up 17 per cent in first quarter

- RAGHAVENDR­A KAMATH

Real estate investors are shifting to pre-leased commercial assets from residentia­l properties after demonetisa­tion.

Sales of pre-leased commercial properties have risen 17 per cent in the first quarter of this year, according to property data analytics firm Propstack.

Demonetisa­tion hit real estate sales badly in November and December because a third of the market is cash based.

About 30-40 per cent of residentia­l real estate purchases in the National Capital Region are by investors, while the number is about 20 per cent in Mumbai.

According to Propstack, sales of commercial properties went down by nearly 45 per cent in 2016 compared to 2015.

"There has been an increase in the number of pre-leased spaces acquired by investors in the first quarter of 2017. Investors are preferring pre-leased commercial assets because they are more secure and the cash flows are predictabl­e," said Raja Seetharama­n, director at Propstack.

Seetharama­n said the sales volume was stable for the first half of 2016 but declined significan­tly in the second half due to demonetisa­tion and the sluggish business sentiment.

"In many cities, lower supply during the second half of 2016 also contribute­d to the decline," Seetharama­n said.

Niranjan Hiranandan­i, chairman of the Hiranandan­i group, said interest from foreign and domestic investors had risen in preleased properties. "Foreign investors are putting money here as opportunit­ies elsewhere have come down and domestic investors are preferring such assets as the risks are minimal and interest rates are declining," he said.

According to Abhishek Tiwari, co-founder at CRE Matrix, a Mumbai-based data analytics firm, investors are opting for pre-leased spaces due to the assurance of annuity income at around 9 per cent per annum and potential appreciati­on in capital values on expectatio­ns of a further yield compressio­n over the next three to five years. Tiwari also said developers continued to face liquidity challenges and were selling commercial properties to tap rising demand.

"Some developers have sold commercial assets in distress, whereas others have closed opportunis­tic deals," he added.

He said capital values had shot up 10-12 per cent, year on year, due to the rise in demand and fall in supply of Grade A pre-leased commercial space.

The fall in interest rates over the last two years had augmented demand for annuity assets, he added. Ramesh Nair, country head and CEO of JLL India, said more deals were happening among developers than with corporates or investors.

About 30-40% of residentia­l real estate purchases in the NCR are by investors while the number is about 20% in Mumbai

 ??  ?? Demonetisa­tion of ~500 and ~1,000 notes hit real estate sales badly in November and December because a third of the market is cash based
Demonetisa­tion of ~500 and ~1,000 notes hit real estate sales badly in November and December because a third of the market is cash based

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India