Showing posts with label India. Show all posts
Showing posts with label India. Show all posts

Thursday 23 August 2012

Facing high ‘real estate’ loans, China, India both pressure banks

In a strange coincidence, worried about high real estate loans, the banking regulator in China and the Indian finance minister both have asked bankers to put pressure on developers to lower home prices and increase sales and cash flows

Both India and China seems to be facing the same problems, especially in the real estate segment. Both countries are worried about the high inventory levels, low offtake and high bad loans of banks that have lent money to builders. The banking regulator in China has asked bankers to put pressure on developers in order to cut exposure to real estate segment. India’s newly appointed finance minister P Chidambaram has ordered exactly the same. China is also trying to curb the stubbornly high real estate prices by imposing a property tax for the first time.

According to a Bloomberg report, China Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC) has told lenders they should also demand more collateral, or tell developers to sell projects or stakes, if the banks predict they will have difficulty repaying loans due within 12 months. The CBRC additionally warned that risks may be obscured because some real estate companies obtained funding through personal loans or borrowing by affiliated businesses after bank credit tightened, the report said.

Back home, terming the issues in housing segment as ‘complex’, newly re-appointed Mr Chidambaram has asked banks to put pressure on developers to lower property prices. “I was told five lakh housing units remained vacant in Mumbai, I don’t know it’s right or wrong, it may be wrong by a factor of 10% or so. But you know that is capital which is blocked, cement, steel, labour...” he said after meeting with chiefs of state-owned banks in Mumbai last week.

According to data from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), banks have lent close to Rs1.2 lakh crore to builders while their home loan portfolio stood at Rs2.5 lakh crore in March 2012.

In May, Moody’s Investors Service estimated that 29 Chinese developers on its rating list, including Hopson Development Holdings, Greentown China Holdings and Shanghai Zendai Property need to repay 159 billion yuan ($25 billion) of short-term debt this year, the most in data going back to 2008.

Chinese banks’ bad loans increased for a third straight quarter in the three months ended 30th June, rising by 18.2 billion yuan, the CBRC has said.

Meanwhile Fitch Ratings, in a research report, said real estate companies in India will continue to face margin compression from high construction costs for both building materials and labour. From December 2011 to April 2012 the price of steel increased 13% and that of cement by 12%. Notwithstanding the trend of deleveraging since Q311, slowing demand, high costs and thus declining profits will keep leverage high for most real estate companies, it added.

Pankaj Kapoor, founder, Liases Foras, pointed out that the market is generating 38% less money than that is required to deliver the projects on time and delays are on the rise. The flow of money is reducing and non-performing assets of the sector are increasing, according to RBI data. This puts further pressure on the asset quality in the near term.

Surprisingly, despite sluggish sales, realty prices have been going up as well which is due to speculation. The pace of construction pace is coming down which will have an impact on the whole economy. Cement and steel industries, which are dependent on the construction sector, would be badly hit as well and this would hamper the GDP growth of the country, Mr Kapoor said. The construction pace in the Mumbai Metropolitan Region has fallen by nearly 52% from the second half of 2009 to the first half of 2012.

China is also trying to dampen rising property prices. According to a Bloomberg report, China’s two-year effort to curb a real-estate bubble included imposing a property tax for the first time in Shanghai and Chongqing, raising down-payment and mortgage requirements, increasing building of low-cost social housing and placing home purchase restrictions in about 40 cities.

Chinese policymakers cut interest rates in June and July after two reductions in reserve requirement ratios for lenders this year as the economy expanded at the slowest pace since 2009. China’s prices of new homes rose in the largest number of cities in 14 months in July, the report said.

In India, interest costs have increased significantly in the past couple of years, as the RBI has cut policy rates just once in April 2012 after as many as 13 hikes since March 2010 to contain inflation. High interest rate regime has hit the industry hard and slowed down the demand.

Realty giant DLF’s chairman KP Singh had recently said that RBI’s monetary policy should not stunt the growth of the real estate sector and uninterrupted access to affordable finance is vital for this business, said a report from PTI.

The government has been looking to create affordable housing but has failed to do it and prices have gone up further. A lot of money in the sector was brought in on the pretext of creating affordable housing. But a lot of this money has increased speculation due to which the land prices have gone up and have created an asset bubble. Developers do not want to cut down on their profits, investors want their own share of the cake and at the end of it the consumer has to bear the brunt by paying higher prices, Mr Kapoor pointed out.

“The way the prices are going up, people are unable to afford homes,” he added. Even if interest rates come down the prices would have to undergo a 32% correction to reach parity and create an economic balance for the real estate sector and this looks very difficult, Mr Kapoor added.

Source: http://www.moneylife.in/article/facing-high-real-estate-loans-china-india-both-pressure-banks/27972.html

Wednesday 8 August 2012

Trump's first project takes off in India

PUNE : US real estate billionaire Donald Trump's first luxury homes project in India has finally taken off. Trump Towers, two 22-floor skyrises, are being built by Panchshil Realty with Donald Trump at Kalyani Nagar, Pune, under a brand licence agreement. With approvals in place, construction has already begun for the 44 five-bedroom flats admeasuring approximately 6,000 sq ft and priced at Rs 12 crore each. Having burnt his fingers twice - the Pune project being his third venture in the past three years - Trump signed the agreement with Panchsil only after the developer got all the statutory building approvals in place, sources said.

Trump is also close to finalizing plans to construct Trump Towers at a three-acre plot close to Boat Club in Chennai and another on a 10-acre plot at Noida. All the three projects are approximately worth Rs 1,500 crore.

Trump's first venture at Bangalore broke off within months while Trump's second project in Mumbai with Rohan Lifescape has not moved further due to regulatory hurdles.

Source: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/business/india-business/Trumps-first-project-takes-off-in-India/articleshow/15398221.cms

Thursday 19 July 2012

Chennai drives more NRI buyers

Chennai

The rupee volatility against US dollar and other linked currencies, overseas institutions’ lending at 4 per cent and favourable exchange rates have all convinced NRIs/PIOs to take advantage of the instant opportunity and plunge into real estate investment in Chennai. In a nutshell, it has become 20 per cent more affordable for NRIs/PIOs due to rupee parity rates alone. Leading developers have reported a quantum jump in the number of enquiries over a period of 3-4 months.

According to industry sources, most of them prefer built units for ready occupation of their parents or relatives and some are looking for periodical return on investment. They are willing to pay the extra premium to get the built units over ongoing projects in and around the city. The preferred price range for apartments varies from Rs 30 lakh to Rs 1 crore. This is apart from the surge in demand for developed plots and villas in and around the city. However, leading land developers do not agree with the view and see no perceptible shift in trend for demand.

There are others who feel that the preferred investment locations are OMR, ECR and parts of Velachery as considerable development is visible in those areas. Competitive lending rate from overseas financial institutions is yet another tilting factor that has encouraged a number of NRIs to mobilise upfront payment overseas for investment in real estate back home. A few of them are even finding it more convenient to raise local funding than through home loans with Indian housing finance companies and banks now.

Moreover, favourable exchange rates have given them additional benefit to borrow locally and remit to India. India has been consistently maintaining its top slot in NRI remittance in the world received from Indian Diaspora globally. Even though Gulf countries are taking more time to recover in the aftermath of economic meltdown, expatriates are now convinced that the job market has become stable unlike a year ago, say Gulf realty outlets. This has resulted in the quantum of NRI enquiries for investment in immovable property in the city going up by 50 per cent over last year, say leading developers.

Interestingly, the demand from NRIs in USA has increased considerably. Local funding at competitive lending rates and loans for expatriates maintaining good credit history at zero per cent interest rates have nudged NRIs to take advantage of the current situation and plough back money into real estate back home.

V Nagarajan, Property Consultant

Source: http://content.magicbricks.com/chennai-drives-more-nri-buyers-2

Thursday 31 May 2012

DLF Q4 net profit down 39% at Rs 211 cr

New Delhi: India's largest realty firm DLF today reported a 39 per cent fall in its consolidated net profit at Rs 211.70 crore for the quarter ended March 31, 2012, on high interest outgo.

The company had posted a net profit of Rs 344.54 crore in the year-ago period.

The total income from operations declined marginally to Rs 2,616.78 crore in the fourth quarter of 2011-12 fiscal as against Rs 2,683.09 crore in the corresponding period of previous year, DLF said in a filing to the BSE.

The interest outgo in the fourth quarter increased to Rs 603.89 crore from Rs 455.70 crore in the year-ago period. As on December 31, 2011, DLF had a debt of over Rs 22,000 crore.

In 2011-12 fiscal, the net profit fell by 27 per cent to Rs 1,200.82 crore from Rs 1,639.61 crore in the previous year.

The income from operations, however, rose to Rs 9,629.38 crore in 2011-12 from Rs 9,560.57 crore in the previous fiscal.

Source: http://www.financialexpress.com/news/dlf-q4-net-profit-down-39-at-rs-211-cr/955761/