Business Standard

HOUSING REELS UNDER NOTE BAN

FRESH CHALLENGES FOR THE STRESSED INDUSTRY

- KARAN CHOUDHURY

The sting of demonetisa­tion is still hurting the real estate and housing sector, which is in the doldrums. From hitting a five-year low in residentia­l property sales in the top eight cities, a measly 1.7 per cent growth in the constructi­on sector last year as compared to five per cent in 2015-16, to challenges such as approvals of permits, rising debt levels and non-performing assets (NPAs), the second part of the Economic Survey of 2016-17 has presented a cautious picture of the sector.

According to the Survey, residentia­l sales across the top eight cities in India fell to a fiveyear low of about 245,000 units in FY17, due to subdued demand over the past three years. Similarly, new residentia­l unit launches, too, fell to 176,000, a 64 per cent decline. Sales were down by nearly one-third. This was primarily due to the prolonged slump and execution delays in project completion which resulted in inventory pile-up.

“Demonetisa­tion in November last year possibly impacted the new launches and sales in the short-term with several states recording a drop in property registrati­ons post demonetisa­tion. Foreign direct investment (FDI) inflows to the constructi­on sector have also declined to $1.9 billion in 2016-17, as against $4.6 billion in 2015-16, even though there was relaxation of FDI norms for the constructi­on developmen­t sector undertaken over the past two to three years,” the Survey said.

According to industry experts, despite several reforms brought in by the government, the industry has seen de-growth for the past several quarters. “While the government has tried a series of reforms in the form of relaxation in FDI norms, enhanced incentives under PMAY, introducti­on of REITs and enactment of Rera, the impact of these reforms is not visible as of now,” said Neeraj Sharma, director, Grant Thornton Advisory Private Limited.

The Survey also highlighte­d the longstandi­ng problem faced by real estate developers of getting multiple approvals and points out that by-laws have not been updated according to the global standards.

“With over 30–35 regulatory approvals required to be obtained by a developer, it takes anywhere between six to 12 months to just obtain them. The whole process is cumbersome and delays projects, inflating project cost by up to 30 per cent,” the Survey said.

Experts said that while the government has been able to bring in regulatory changes such as introducti­on of real estate regulatory act (Rera) and the goods and services tax (GST), resources on the ground were not efficient enough to enforce them, leading to much confusion.

“Getting approvals should be efficient, right now it is counter-productive. This is one of the biggest challenges the sector is facing at present. Right now what exactly is happening on the ground is unclear. While the government has taken some great steps, implementa­tion is still a problem,” said Samantak Das, chief economist and national director–Research, Knight Frank India.

The real estate sector has also been grappling with liquidity issues and piling debt. The total outstandin­g debt of listed real estate developers in India has risen from ~25,000 crore ($3.7 billion) in 2006-07 to over ~83,000 crore ($12 billion) in 2015-16.

According to Parveen Jain, real estate body NAREDCO’s president, the de-growth in the sector is going to continue for the next two years before things start looking up.

Residentia­l sales across the top eight cities in India fell to a five-year low of about 245,000 units in FY17, due to subdued demand over the past three years

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