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  • BPTP SAYS, “PRICE JUST RIGHT FOR NOIDA DEAL”

    BPTP Group, a Delhi-based real estate developer, said the price it paid for the Noida property i.e. Rs 130,207 per square meter, is reasonable and was thought through. “We had decided on the amount well before, it was not a knee-jerk reaction to compete with other bidders (such as DLF). The location, infrastructure and connectivity makes it an ideal commercial place,” director Sudhanshu Tripathi.

    BPTP on Tuesday won the rights to develop 94 acres of commercial land at Noida, in the National Capital Region, by outbidding the country’s largest realtor DLF Ltd, which offered Rs 1,17,000 per square metre, and Omaxe, which bid Rs 80,100 per square metre.

    BPTP plans to create “the financial hub of north India” in the area, called Bank Street, which will include five-star luxury hotels and corporate offices. Tripathy said upon completion, office rentals in Noida would be more than its arch rival city Gurgaon.

    The construction cost for the financial city will be around Rs 3,000 crores and the total cost of the project is expected to be around Rs 9,000 crores.

    BPTP also has 2,000 acres of land bank. “We will have the building plans ready in the next 6-7 months,” Tripathi said. The company, which does not have any “immediate” plans to go for projects in South India, said it is in talks with the UK-based renowned architects Foster and Partners and Germany’s Aedes for the project.

    The office space in Sector 94, running along the Noida and Greater Noida Expressway, would cater to the needs of a commercial place of companies and will not include any IT parks or buildings. “It is going to be 100% corporate offices and will not include any IT buildings or BPO call centers as they pay better rentals. There are no corporate offices in Noida, and with this deal, we plan to change that,” Tripathi said.

  • PROPERTY SHOW IN PUNE ON THE MARCH 15, 16

    Pune is witnessing tremendous growth in real estate sector, both in commercial and residential space. With an objective to showcase the finest properties of Pune, a leading online real estate company is organizing a two-day property show, for the first time on March 15 and 16 at Royal Western India Turf Club, Solapur Road, Pune. Around 20 leading real estate developers will be participating in the show and over 5000 property seekers are expected to visit this mega property show in two days. The Pune property show is expected to do deals worth 18 crores.

    Pune is amongst the fastest growing cities in India and is experiencing a rapid need for increase in infrastructure. The city has seen rapid increase in real estate activities over the last couple of years. The city accounts 12% of all the traffic coming on the portal, with more than 10000 listed properties from the city.

    Affordable housing: There is a large demand for houses and projects below 60 lakhs, developers are still focusing on premium projects above this value. This trend for affordable housing will continue for the next 1.5 years, and developers will have to come up with more projects within the 60 lakhs bracket until the premium projects have some very exclusive features to attract. So this concludes that there is a difference in the demand and supply requirement.

  • LIC HOUSING TO LAUNCH RS 3.5 BN FUND

    Life Insurance Corporation Housing Finance (LICHF) is set to launch a new venture capital fund for realty projects.

    The size of the fund, which is awaiting regulator approval, is likely to be Rs 3-3.5 billion. LICHF`s new realty fund is expected to invest in residential projects. LICHF had taken a 5% stake valued at Rs 75 million in the new Rs 1.5-billion credit card arm of LIC, which is likely to begin operations in six months.

    As part of its overseas expansion plans, LICHF will open a new office in Singapore. Currently, it has branches in Dubai and Kuwait. Meanwhile, LICHF Care Homes, a subsidiary of LICHF, is planning to open residential units for senior citizens in Punjab, Orissa, Kerala and West Bengal. The first project was unveiled in Bangalore.

    During April 2007-February 2008, the company sanctioned Rs 73.85 billion against Rs 48.88 billion in the same period last financial year. Disbursements stood at Rs 59.41 billion compared to Rs 41.99 billion.

  • Indian Real Estate rush lures foreign investors

    HONG KONG India will have at least 50 property-related initial public offerings in the next year as the real estate industry booms, according to Anish Jhaveri, the head of equity sales at HSBC Holdings in India.

    “With the opening of the real estate sector, there’s a lot of need for funds,” Jhaveri said in a recent interview in Hong Kong. “The government has been giving very proactive support to the whole sector.”

    The real estate market in India is worth about $12 billion and is growing at about 30 percent a year, Ernst & Young said in a report last month commissioned by the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry. Rising incomes, easy financing and population growth are driving demand for housing and luring overseas investors.

    “The appetite for real estate IPOs will be there,” K.K. Mital, chief investment officer at Escorts Asset Management in New Delhi said a phone interview Friday. “The young work force is looking for real estate investment, and the financing is available, the banking system is supporting this growth.”

    Jhaveri said that venture capitalists and overseas investors were poised to invest over $5 billion in the Indian real estate sector, without providing more details. “People are seeking more clarity” on possible changes to property regulations before investing, he said.

    His forecast takes into account the possibility that India could allow real estate investment trusts, or REITs, to invest in the nation’s property industry. Still, of the 50 real estate related IPOs that he predicted would take place in the next year, he only expected a “small” number to be REITs.

    In the past year, India had eight initial share offerings by engineering and construction companies, which raised $478 million, according to Bloomberg data. That compares with the six initial public offerings raising $304 million in the previous 12-month period.

    Indian billionaire Kushal Pal Singh’s real estate company, DLF Universal, is seeking to revive the biggest Indian share sale once regulators decide on a complaint by shareholders. The New Delhi-based company plans to submit offer documents to regulators, paving the way for an offering by early December, Saurabh Chawla, the finance vice president of DLF, said in a phone interview Friday.

    India is short of 20 million housing units, according to a study by Housing Development Finance. That shortage will get worse, according to UBS analysts, citing the growing population and increasing affluence. Asia’s fourth-largest economy grew 8.9 percent in the three months to June from a year earlier.

  • Indian Real Estate rush lures foreign investors

    HONG KONG India will have at least 50 property-related initial public offerings in the next year as the real estate industry booms, according to Anish Jhaveri, the head of equity sales at HSBC Holdings in India.

    “With the opening of the real estate sector, there’s a lot of need for funds,” Jhaveri said in a recent interview in Hong Kong. “The government has been giving very proactive support to the whole sector.”

    The real estate market in India is worth about $12 billion and is growing at about 30 percent a year, Ernst & Young said in a report last month commissioned by the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry. Rising incomes, easy financing and population growth are driving demand for housing and luring overseas investors.

    “The appetite for real estate IPOs will be there,” K.K. Mital, chief investment officer at Escorts Asset Management in New Delhi said a phone interview Friday. “The young work force is looking for real estate investment, and the financing is available, the banking system is supporting this growth.”

    Jhaveri said that venture capitalists and overseas investors were poised to invest over $5 billion in the Indian real estate sector, without providing more details. “People are seeking more clarity” on possible changes to property regulations before investing, he said.

    His forecast takes into account the possibility that India could allow real estate investment trusts, or REITs, to invest in the nation’s property industry. Still, of the 50 real estate related IPOs that he predicted would take place in the next year, he only expected a “small” number to be REITs.

    In the past year, India had eight initial share offerings by engineering and construction companies, which raised $478 million, according to Bloomberg data. That compares with the six initial public offerings raising $304 million in the previous 12-month period.

    Indian billionaire Kushal Pal Singh’s real estate company, DLF Universal, is seeking to revive the biggest Indian share sale once regulators decide on a complaint by shareholders. The New Delhi-based company plans to submit offer documents to regulators, paving the way for an offering by early December, Saurabh Chawla, the finance vice president of DLF, said in a phone interview Friday.

    India is short of 20 million housing units, according to a study by Housing Development Finance. That shortage will get worse, according to UBS analysts, citing the growing population and increasing affluence. Asia’s fourth-largest economy grew 8.9 percent in the three months to June from a year earlier.

  • DRIVEN BY DEMAND FROM THE RETAIL SECTOR, THE GROWTH IN RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE COULD ACCELERATE

     According to a report by propertyvertical.com, retail growth will not only push demand for commercial property but will drive demand in the residential segment as well. The report, commenting on the causal relationship between growth in the commercial segment and the demand for housing, asserts that rapid commercial development in Delhi and the NCR has led to a spill over of housing growth from Noida to Greater Noida. Gurgaon to Meerut, Bhiwadi and Ghaziabad to Manesar. The report goes on to state that the next best bet for investors in the NCR is Manesar. Emerging as one of the biggest industrial hubs around NCR, Manesar has become an attractive investment destination. In fact, it is likely to be one of the biggest growth centres in the NCR. The report further states that it has all the ingredients of being the next commercial hub, after Gurgaon, with better infrastructural facilities and tax incentives. It is also likely to emerge as one of India’s major outsourcing hubs, with corporate entities like Honda, Baxter, Suzuki, Stanley, Mitsubishi, Nippon, Toyota and Maruti Udyog setting up shop here. Naturally, such massive corporate and industrial activities not only triggered the need for office space, but have also created a huge demand for residential properties from people who are employed here, and also from those likely to be inducted by emerging corporate sectors. Ghaziabad, too, has received a major boost due to the Commonwealth Games 2010. There are major hotels with international standards under construction as also huge commercial malls, with some having hotels on top floors. These will be operational in areas like Indirapuram, Vaishali, Kaushabhi and Vasundhra. The Metros is another development here and has certainly resulted in the appreciation of land prices along the route. According to the report, in the last nine months, residential property prices in Indirapuram have gone up from an average of Rs.1600 per sq.ft. to over Rs. 3200 per sq.ft. This clearly depicts Ghaziabad’s increasing popularity, which will certainly give boost to the commercial segment once residential properties are developed and inhabited. Benefiting from Metro extensions, expressways, wider highways and release of land parcels, Delhi and NCR promise to be sought after destinations

  • REALTY REGULATOR FOR DELHI SOON

     Announcing this perhaps for the umpteenth time, the Ministry of Urban Development has said that will set up a Regulatory Authority to monitor and curb malpractices in real estate activities in Delhi and the National Capital Region (NCR) area as also address the grievances of builders and developers, which will come into effect by early 2008. 

    Disclosing this at the Assocham conference on ‘Urban Land Markets & Finances’ held in Delhi this week, Union Minster for Urban Development Jaipal Reddy also announced that the proposed authority would work as a role model for other states to follow, particularly in view of growing real estate activities throughout the country so that the consumers get a fair deal.

     
     
     OFFICE STAKES IN BIG METROS 

    Decline in the growth of office rental values in South Delhi is attributed to new supply that has entered the market this year. On the other hand, rental values in Mumbai’s Bandra Kurla complex rose by 22% from January to September 2007, marking it the fast emerging new central business district of the metropolis

     

    Location

    Current average office rentals

    Average rental increase

     

    Rs/sq.ft./mnth

    Q1 to Q3 2007

    Q1 to Q3 2006

    NCR      

    CBD-CP

    317

    20%

    76%

    South Delhi

    217

    15%

    50%

    Gurgaon

    113

    20%

    65%

    MUMBAI      

    Nariman point

    400

    33%

    40%

    Worli

    400

    33%

    72%

    Bandra kulra complex

    295

    22%

    93%

    BANGALORE      

    CBD/OFF CBD

    70

    19%

    31%

    Suburban

    48

    14%

    21%

    Whitefield/Electronic city

    27

    0%

    8%

    Source: Cushman & Wakefield

  • Delhi Real Estate Witnesses The Financial Showers

    Wednesday 10, 2006

    New Delhi, the national capital of India is one of the prime cities in the country which has witnessed the economic development plans being drafted in the Parliament house to the effects that economic growth has spurred on the real estate and other service sectors in Delhi. Incorporated as one of top three investors’ choices for real estate investment in Asia, New Delhi continues to be one of the most competent and healthy competitor amongst the property markets across the region. And as investors and buyers make a beeline for acquiring the best chunk of real estate market, the finance sector in India has evolved as the possible gainers.

    The banks in India which initially did brisk business with their saving schemes has now opted for the housing finance section as a more profitable business, since the real estate scenario in Delhi shows an upswing. The demand for properties in New Delhi touches new heights arising mainly due to the requirement for a large number of residential and commercial spaces as a large number of investors are seeking investments in the Delhi region or the nearby NCR areas. Delhi evolving as a popular investment destination for investors in the residential and the retail sector has lead to escalation of property prices many-fold and are still on the rise thereby making investment in the capital city of India a deal worth to be clinched.

    But the bulk of disposable income generated by the employees in the corporate sector along with easy funding by every finance company in India has of late made property investments a not so formidable task. Easy loan facilities and a horde of finance companies offering some of the best deals and dipping interest rates have also been responsible for increase in Delhi real estate investments. Almost all the major financial institutions like ICICI, HDFC, IDBI and HSBC, to name a few have successful operational bases in the city making housing loans a competitive business. This competitive market has in some ways being beneficial to the consumers and if the trend continues, the real estate scenario in Delhi is bound to offer investment opportunities for buyers and developers who would want to capitalize on this growing opportunity. And if industry experts are to be believed, New Delhi is yet to see major transformation in the real estate market as the city gears up to remodel itself for the 2010 Commonwealth Games shedding its reputation of being a ‘walled city’ to a ‘World City’ of the future.

  • India 16th most expensive retail spot

     India has been ranked as the 16th most expensive retail ‘high street destination’ in the world by a latest report. According to the report ‘Main Streets Across the World (MSATW) 2007′ by real estate consultants firm Cushman & Wakefield, Khan Market in New Delhi is the most expensive retail destination in the country with rentals of Rs 950 per sq ft per month in the second quarter. It witnessed an annual growth of 35.7 per cent over the same period last year. “Khan Market is the biggest riser in the ranking of the world’s most expensive shopping locations in terms of retail rents, moving up eight places from last years 24th position,” the report said. New York’s Fifth Avenue retained its title as the world’s most expensive shopping destination followed by Hong Kong’s Causeway Bay and Avenue des Champs Elysees in Paris.  “Retail is going through a revolution in India, although a part of the increase in rents is due to lack of high-quality space in the right location,” Cushman & Wakefield India national head (retail) Rajneesh Mahajan said. The report said India also figured among the world’s top 10 locations that witnessed highest rental increase in local currency terms.  Connaught Placein Delhi is the highest gainer in Asia and second only to Chicago’s East Oak Streetacross the world, with an annual growth of 87.5 per cent.  Kemp’s Corner in Mumbai has also witnessed high rental growth of 78.2 per cent, making it the fourth highest riser of rental growth. Greater Kailash in Delhi and Fort/Fountain and Colaba in Mumbai were also among the highest rent rises recorded with increase of 57.1 per cent, 55.2 per cent and 51.1 per cent respectively. In the period, the rental in the Connaught Placewas Rs 750 per sq ft a month, while the same for Kemps Corner was Rs 490 per sq ft per month, the report added.  Source: http://inhome.rediff.com

  • Destination Navi Mumbai

     Apartment spread cross 6,500 sq ft with private parking bays on each floor, exclusive elevator for each apartment, ultra-luxurious amenities and a manicured garden thrown in. The building is Ellora Castle, the price of each apartment is Rs 6 crore and the location is Palm Beach Road of Navi Mumbai.  Ellora Castle is just one among the 119 stalls at the ongoing Haute Property exhibition in Vashi (November 16 to 19 at the exhibition grounds outside Vashi station), which is mainly targeted towards homebuyers from the Mumbai metropolis. “From being a low-cost housing destination, Navi Mumbai is now the preferred option for many high net worth individuals because of the quality of life it has to offer,” says Bhupendra Shah of Bahamian Group, part of the exhibition’s organising committee. Till a few years ago, Navi Mumbai promised affordable housing and a lot of people shifted from Mumbai to bigger flats in the satellite city. Today, the real estate prices in areas of Navi Mumbai like Vashi and Palm Beach are on par with or even higher than the suburbs of Mumbai. For those with large families, Navi Mumbai is the one of the few places where one can afford a palatial penthouse or a four-bedroom flat with a view. For the others, most nodes of Navi Mumbai offer row houses, independent houses and flats at affordable rates. Shopping malls, wide roads, good schools, sprawling markets and good connectivity are the key factors that make Navi Mumbai an attractive housing option. “The infrastructure of Navi Mumbai is improving with each passing month,” says Nerul-resident Nar HERE IS UR TOOesh Sawant. In the last two months, three major malls have been inaugurated in the city, giving the local residents lot to choose from for the weekend outing. Educational facilities are also a major reason for people preferring Navi Mumbai. There are about 10 engineering colleges in Navi Mumbai, apart from medical, degree and catering colleges and institutes. Prakash D’Mello, who moved to Koparkhairne from Chamber, reminisces, “We bought this house about 11 years ago and have seen the place develop. What I like about Navi Mumbai are the educational facilities. They are far better from most schools of Mumbai and affordable too.” His wife Sujata adds, “The bus depot is just a couple of minutes away that connects us to the rest of the city and Mumbai. Navi Mumbai is also quite spacious with with a lot of greenery around. This is what we call luxury” While educational facilities are the preference of some people, others prefer the peace that Navi Mumbai offers. Rakesh Sharma, resident of Belapur is very happy with his house in the Artists Colony “With the extra FSI, our house is much bigger now. For me the serene surroundings itself are inspiring and I sometimes wonder how people live surrounded by busy roads and continuous traffic in Mumbai.” Source: Hindustan Time

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