Knight Frank India today launched the
eighth edition of its flagship half-yearly report -India Real Estate. The
report presents a comprehensive analysis of the residential (across
eight cities) and office(across seven cities) market
performance for the period July – December 2017 (H2 2017).
Residential takeaways:
- Homes
launches in 2017 plummeted by staggering 78% from the peak of 2010. Volume
of new projects entering the market in the second half of 2017 stood at
approximately one-fourth of the supply levels in 2015
- Launches
below the demonetisation-hit H2 2016
- All
cities witness fall in launches YOY, Hyderabad worst hit
- At
84%, Hyderabad records steepest fall in launches. Other IT/ITeS dominated
markets such as Pune (58%), Bengaluru (37%), Chennai (33%) also witnessed
massive drop in launches
- Sales
volume hit seven-year; 62% down from the peak of 2011; YoY drop of 7% in
2017
- Sales
similar to demonetisation-hit H2 2016; down by 2% YoY
- Sales
struggle across markets; Bengaluru down 34%
- Mumbai
(19%) and NCR (21%) see a spike on a demonetisation base effect
- Bengaluru,
in particular, recorded negative growth in both launches (-37%) and sales
(-34%) for the first time in H2 2017. Hyderabad also recorded the decadal
low in home launches
- The
weighted average prices fell by an average of 3% across cities with Pune
witnessing the highest decline of 7% YoY followed by Mumbai at 5% YoY.
Markets high on ready to move inventory such as Hyderabad and Ahmedabad
saw prices move up 3% and 2% respectively.
Office Takeaways
- New
completions increase by 7% in 2017 but not at par with occupiers’ demand.
Supply in H2 2017, 13% up YoY
- Transactions
maintain a steady momentum. Technology sector headwinds and supply crunch
responsible for subdued growth
- Major
cites record robust transactions, Bengaluru maintains its lead
- Vacancy
levels hit 5-year low in the face of inadequate supply. Want of quality
office stocks was glaring in turbulence-hit IT/ITeS dominated markets such
as Bengaluru (3%), Pune (6%) and Hyderabad (5%)
- While
the share of the office market held by the tech business tapered from 39%
in H2 2016 to 37% in H2 2017, the Other Services sector captured more than
one-third of transactions recorded in the second half of 2017
- Co-working
service providers an emerging phenomenon until the beginning of 2017
fortified its position by taking up approximately 1.3 Mn sq. ft office
space in H2 2017
- Except
Mumbai that saw surprise new supply of office stock, strong rental growth
was recorded across other office markets. While Mumbai saw flat YoY rental
growth, Hyderabad and Bengaluru experienced the strongest rental growth at
8.5% and 9.2% YoY respectively.
Speaking on the occasion, Shishir
Baijal, Chairman & Managing Director, Knight Frank India said, “2017
was been packed with uncertainty, volatility and long-term promise of new
opportunities. While a battery of reforms tested industry stakeholders, the new
paradigm of transparency and consolidation achieved in the process should pave
the way for healthy momentum in the near future. Until the end of 2017, India’s
residential sector had shrunk to a fraction of its size in less than a decade.
Nevertheless the near standstill triggered by demonetisation seems to have
tapered with time. At the same time stakeholders are growing in confidence with
the gradual acceptance of structural reforms such as the Real Estate
(Regulation and Development) Act, 2016. The Industry however, is still
grappling to navigate its way through the new tax regime post the introduction
of the Goods and Services Act.
Meanwhile, select markets wherein RERA
has matured have witnessed developers re-launch projects at attractive prices
which led to an uptick in sales volumes in 2017. The strategic switch in
developers’ approach has led to a price reduction is most markets. All in all
it is a buyers’ market today. And, we hope the momentum to hold steady in the
near future.”
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