The Sunday Guardian

Age group of property buyers dropping: Survey

The homebuyers’ category is now dominated by the mid-thirties age group.

- DIBYENDU MONDAL NEW DELHI REUTERS

Gone are the days when people from their mid-forties dominated the homebuyers’ category. Ever since the easy availabili­ty of home loans, the homebuyers’ category has been dominated by the mid-thirties age group, according to a recent survey conducted by ANAROCK property consultant­s.

The survey said that there has been a “tectonic” shift in not just the overall buying pattern, but also in the age of property buyers. According to ANAROCK’S survey, 37% of the participan­ts who were looking to buy homes belonged to the age group 35-45 years, while 25% of such homebuyers belonged to the age group 45-55 years. And those in the age group 25-35 years constitute­d 20% of homebuyers in India.

Young homebuyers dominate mostly in the metropolit­an cities like Bangalore, Mumbai, Pune, Kolkata and Hyderabad. In Bangalore, over 50% of the home buyers are in the age group of 35-45 years and for Mumbai, it is a little less than 40%. Pune has about 48% young home buyers and Kolkata about 38% home buyers in the 35-45 years category.

However, in Hyderabad, the age group of property buyers is even lower. Most number of properties in the city of Hyderabad is owned by people from the 25-35 years age group. However, in Delhi-ncr, the age group of property buyers still remains at the higher age bracket of 45 to 55 years and this, experts say, is because of the rising cost of property in the Delhi-ncr region.

This trend of the younger generation looking to have a fixed asset in terms of their “own” home began from the late 2000s when the availabili­ty of home loans became easier and home buying also attached a lot of tax benefits.

Prashant Thakur, Research Director, ANAROCK Property Consultant­s, said, “During this period, winds of change blew and the age bracket of property buyers began to drop, coming down to 35-45 years. Home loans were readily available, and homebuyers warmed up significan­tly to the notion of using borrowed funds rather than depleting all their savings. The fact that home loans also carried attractive tax benefits certainly helped, too.”

“In this period, banks and other lending institutio­ns also began to re-strategize their approach, and youth became the target audience. The availabili­ty of finance became the key driver for this change. And millennial­s predominan­tly favoured paying EMIS for buying a home over the ‘dead’ expense of rentals and the ranks of this vital age demographi­c swelled steadily till about 2015-16,” Thakur added. MUMBAI: Malaysia is planning to step up imports from India in an effort to help bring down New Delhi’s trade deficit with Kuala Lumpur, Teresa Kok, Malaysia’s minister of primary industries, said.

Malaysia is in touch with India’s various ministries to identify the commoditie­s that Kuala Lumpur can import, Kok told late on Thursday.

Currently India, the world’s leading importer of vegetable oils, buys large quantities of palm oil from Malaysia.

Malaysia’s exports to India stood at $10.8 billion in the 2018/19 fiscal, and imports from New Delhi totalled $6.4 billion, according to India’s trade ministry data.

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