Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Virus resurgence slows home sales

- Madhurima Nandy madhurima.n@livemint.com

BENGALURU: The raging second wave of the pandemic has hit India’s residentia­l property market, with new home sales set to fall sharply this quarter as potential buyers defer plans and companies put off new launches.

This has dampened a recovery of the sector seen till March supported by government sops in some states, lower borrowing costs and pent-up demand.

In states such as Maharashtr­a, which includes the Mumbai Metropolit­an Region (MMR)— India’s most valuable property market—the withdrawal of a waiver on stamp duty added to a drop in property registrati­ons in April.

Property registrati­ons in Mumbai plunged 42% in April to 10,136 units from 17,449 in March amid the withdrawal of the stamp duty waiver and the second wave. Of the total, only 7% were new property registrati­ons, while the rest were of properties sold during the December to March period.

“We expect home sales to see a big drop, by 25-30%, in the April-June quarter. Until the second wave, sales in the last few months were driven by stamp duty waiver and pent-up demand. With the second wave, the impact will be significan­t,” said Pankaj Kapoor, founder and MD, Liases Foras Real Estate Rating & Research Pvt. Ltd.

India’s top eight property markets saw a 32% sequential growth in home sales in the March quarter at 69,697 units, according to Liases Foras.

Meanwhile, developers and real estate consultant­s expect the slump in home sales to continue but are hopeful of rebound in the second half of 2021.

Mohit Malhotra, MD and CEO, Godrej Properties Ltd, expects the second wave to disrupt the residentia­l property market over the next three to four months but said the long-term outlook remains strong.

“There was significan­t volume growth post lockdown last year and we believe that will continue in the long term,” he said.

Developers were also expecting the recovery seen till March to drive an increase in property prices.

“We need sustained volume growth for a couple of quarters before one can realistica­lly expect price hikes to happen,” Malhotra said.

With the sales momentum expected to stay weak in the near term, some developers have started postponing project launches. Sanjay Dutt, managing director and chief executive, Tata Realty and Infrastruc­ture Ltd (TRIL), said the company has temporaril­y closed its sales experience centres, though it is continuing online transactio­ns.

 ?? MINT ?? Developers and real estate consultant­s expect the slump in home sales to continue.
MINT Developers and real estate consultant­s expect the slump in home sales to continue.

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