Showing posts with label Ahmedabad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ahmedabad. Show all posts

Tuesday, 20 November 2012

Commercial rentals drop in Ahmedabad in 2012: C&W

Realty slackness seem to have gripped commercial rentals in Ahmedabad. Sample this, according to a latest annual global rental report by Real estate consultants Cushman & Wakefield, rentals at commercial area in Ahmedabad witnessed a decline of about seven per cent over previous year.

As per the report, rentals at one of the most commercialized areas in Ahmedabad, C G Road has registered a slowdown in rental values of seven per cent over the previous year, while that in other cities like Mumbai, Kolkata and Chennai registered annual rental growth between 75 per cent to 36 per cent.

Commercial areas in other cities including Bengalore and Hyderabad also witnessed a rental decline of 9 per cent over previous year on account of excessive development work around the area making retailing an arduous experience in the area.

In its report "Main Streets across the world", Cushman & Wakefield reported that Mumbai witnessed the highest rental growth globally. "Colaba Causeway in Mumbai recorded a rental increase of 75 per cent over last year, on the back of strong retailer demand and continuous preference for prime high street properties in the city. Kolkata, Park Street at 53.8 per cent and Chennai, Khader Niwaz Khan Road at 36.7 per cent were among the global top ten cities to register highest annual rental growth," the report stated.

Khan Market in New Delhi emerged as the 26th most expensive in the world, retaining its position as most expensive retail location in India. This main-street has always been India’s most prime retail location, due to the advantage of being situated in the midst of the premium most residential boulevard of the capital city, Cushman & Wakefield report noted.

Prime rents in India rose by 12.5 per cent on the back of strong occupier demand across all sub-sectors.

Source: http://business-standard.com/india/news/commercial-rentals-drop-in-ahmedabad-in-2012-cw/196377/on

Wednesday, 17 October 2012

Azure Capital to raise Rs 500 cr through a real estate fund

New Delhi: Azure Capital has said that it will raise up to Rs 500 crore through a real estate fund that focuses on commercial properties across top seven cities of India.

Azure Capital, an integrated investment company, will launch of India Realty Fund-II, a rental yield fund that focuses on commercial properties across top seven cities of India, the company said in a statement.

The size of the fund is Rs 250 crore with an additional Green shoe option of Rs 250 crore, aggregating to Rs 500 crore.

The India Realty Fund II would primarily focus on investment grade commercial properties with lease to reputed tenants in the top seven cities of the country such as Mumbai, Delhi-NCR, Bangalore, Chennai, Hyderabad, Pune and Ahmedabad.

"These projects will provide regular returns to investors with an upside of capital appreciation. The valuations presently are quite attractive as developers are increasingly looking at deleveraging their assets," Azure Capital Advisors CEO Shailesh Ghorpade said.

Ghorpade further noted that India Realty Fund-II targets such investors who have a low risk appetite. It will provide recurring yield income coupled with high and stable capital appreciation, diversified portfolio with superior risk - adjusted returns.

The deployment of the India Realty Fund II will be across 10-12 commercial properties with an average ticket size of Rs 25-30 crore.

The fund plans to raise the entire corpus within 9 months from the first close.

The India Realty Fund I had successfully invested in residential real estate projects in Bangalore and other parts of India, the company said.

PTI

Source: http://zeenews.india.com/business/realestate/upcoming-projects/azure-capital-to-raise-rs-500-cr-through-a-real-estate-fund_62546.html

Thursday, 4 October 2012

18% of housing demand to come from top 8 cities: C&W report

The total new demand for residential dwellings during 2012–16 will be 11.8 million units across India, according to real estate consultancy Cushman & Wakefield.

Of this demand, top 8 cities will account for 18 per cent or 2.1 million units across categories.

The annual report "Evolving Paradigm – Future of Indian Real Estate" has been bought out in association with Global Real Estate Institute (GRI). The GRI is a global club of senior real estate investors, developers and lenders.

Of the demand in the top eight cities, the requirement in mid-segment is estimated to be highest at approximately 59 per cent or 1.3 million units, followed by demand in the high-end segment which is 4,51,000 units. The low-end housing demand is expected to be 3,62,000 over the next five years.

Sanjay Dutt, Executive Managing Director, C&W India, in a statement said, "The demand creation in leading 8 cities is reflective of the economic strength that these cities have. We see a higher demand in the mid-ranged segment in these cities."

The total demand for housing units is expected to increase at a compounded annual growth rate of 2.8 per cent across India, with Bengaluru expected to record the highest demand growth of 4.1 per cent followed by Pune and Hyderabad.

NCR is likely to see the highest demand of 381,000 units in mid and high-end segments during 2012 – 2016.

Southern cities of Bengaluru (338,546 units), Chennai (257,796 units) and Hyderabad (199,575 units) will account for approximately 45 per cent of the demand in mid and high-end segments.

Mumbai is expected to see demand of 188,708 for mid and high-end housing, Ahmedabad (173,394 units) and Pune (144,422 units) and Kolkata’s (77,000 units).

Source: http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/news/real-estate/article3964920.ece

Monday, 30 July 2012

India's shopping malls lose bustle as economy slows down

MUMBAI: The biggest shopping mall in Mumbai, one of the world's most crowded cities, can feel like a pretty lonely place. Eight months ago, multi-storied Phoenix Market City opened for business in the eastern suburb of Kurla with a total floor area of 1.13 million square feet, the size of about 15 soccer fields. To date, just two-thirds of its 320 stores have been taken up and foot traffic can be thin.

Asia's third-largest economy is growing at its slowest pace in nine years and sluggish consumer spending is forcing mall developers to scale back plans. It will take years for the glut of retail space conceived during headier times to be absorbed by tenants, even as India fine-tunes rules to make it easier for foreign shops to enter the country on their own, analysts say.

"We are holding back on new store openings and focusing on our existing stores," said Ramesh Tainwala, chairman of Planet Retail, which has leased shops in Phoenix Market City and is the Indian partner of global retail brands, including Body Shop, Next, Nautica and Debenhams.

"We are shutting down some of our stores in areas where rentals are too high, and with the slowdown in consumption complicating things further," he said, adding that the company is also asking landlords to renegotiate rents.

Consumer spending is on track to grow just 5.7 per cent this year, compared with 24 per cent in 2010, according to Euromonitor International, a feeble pace for a domestic demand-led economy.

Nationally, retail vacancy rates are 20 percent and will likely rise to 25 per cent by 2014, according to property consultants Jones Lang LaSalle, as floor space in malls grows to 100 million square feet from 66 million now. More than 90 per cent of shopping in India is still done at unorganised one-off shops.

By comparison, Thailand's capital of Bangkok alone has 62 million square feet of mall space, of which only about 7 per cent is empty, according to a report by CB Richard Ellis.

"There are just not enough people walking in," said Akshay Khatri, who manages the Van Heusen apparel store in Phoenix Market City, which is developed by Phoenix Mills, one of India's few developers specialising in malls.

Vacant malls, though, are also to be found in China where there has been a rush to build them. The 7 million-square-foot New South China Mall in the southern manufacturing city of Dongguan - the biggest mall in the world - is mostly vacant.

EMPTY SHOPS

Of the 12 million square feet of Indian shopping centre space planned for opening in 2012, only about 60 per cent is expected to do so, according to Jones Lang LaSalle, as delayed mall projects dot India's biggest cities.

DLF, India's largest property developer, has kept its proposed 4.5 million square foot Mall of India project in Gurgaon on hold since late 2008. That mall was to have been India's largest, with 2 million square feet of retail space.

"The crazy building boom in retail real estate is not going to come back," said Kishore Bhatija, chief executive officer of InOrbit Malls, owned by developer K Raheja, which altered its plan for a 500,000 square-foot-mall in Vadodara to 400,000 square feet, and added a hotel instead.

"There is stress on the business model. It is getting a bit expensive. Real estate prices and construction costs are rising but the retail business is not growing enough to absorb this," said Bhatija, adding that breakeven on projects is lengthening, in some cases to 10 or more years from seven in 2007-2008.

In fast-growing cities like Ahmedabad, Pune and the New Delhi region, vacancy rates at malls are more than 25 percent, according to property consultants Cushman & Wakefield, putting pressure on rents.

Retail rents are down 30-40 per cent from peaks in 2008, according to ratings agency Crisil. That's especially painful for developers, when servicing loans is expensive at 12-13 per cent interest. The building boom of 2007-2008 was funded in part by cheap private equity.

Shubhranshu Pani, managing director of retail at Jones Lang LaSalle, said when the downturn in 2008/09 spurred a correction in rents there was a shift from fixed rents to revenue-linked rents, putting more risk on the developer.

"Just increasing rents will not work because at the end of the day it has to be affordable for retailers to do business," said InOrbit's Bhatija.

SLOW START

India recently allowed full foreign ownership in single brand retail, but retailers have not rushed in to set up shop on their own as sourcing rules remain a challenge. Only Sweden's Ikea, the world's biggest furniture retailer, and UK shoe chain Pavers have applied to enter under the new rules.

India may also soon revive a plan to allow in foreign supermarkets such as Wal-Mart Stores and Carrefour, which could eventually create huge anchor tenants for shopping centres.

"Will that mean an immediate expansion of shopping centres? No," said Sanjay Dutt, managing director at Cushman & Wakefield. "It will take three, four years until there is a big revival," he said.

At Phoenix Market City in Mumbai only 205 of the 255 leased stores are open.

"We have quite a lot of stores there and the current traffic is rather disappointing," said Planet Retail's Tainwala.

Reflecting some of the concerns, shares of Phoenix Mills, which has four malls across India, are down about 15.3 per cent over the past year, underperforming the wider Mumbai market .BSESN which is down about 10.7 percent.

Shishir Srivastava, CEO of Phoenix Mills, believes that once a multiplex cinema and bowling alley open in coming months and more retailers like Lancome, Esprit, and Inditex's Zara open shop, traffic will increase and monthly sales will rise from the current 770 rupees a square foot.

Monthly spending at its original mall, the popular High Street Phoenix in central Mumbai, India's largest city, is 1,500-1,600 rupees a square foot.

"It takes a while for a new shopping centre, especially one as big as this, to fill out and establish itself," Srivastava said. "Things could have been better but we are optimistic."

Source: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/business/india-business/Indias-shopping-malls-lose-bustle-as-economy-slows-down/articleshow/15249801.cms

Wednesday, 11 July 2012

'Realty firms postpone shopping mall construction in 8 cities'

Realty firms have delayed the construction of shopping malls in eight major cities due to large vacant space in the existing complexes, according to property consultant Cushman & Wakefield.

"The retail real estate market recorded a deferment of more than 30 per cent of retail mall space against the projected supply for the first half of the year," C&W said in a statement.

The consultant, however, said the deferment was necessary considering the high vacancy rates in the shopping malls and cautious approach adopted by retailers on expansion.

The eight major cities (Ahmedabad, Bengaluru, Chennai, Hyderabad, Kolkata, Mumbai, NCR and Pune) witnessed a fresh mall supply of 2.27 million sq ft during first half of 2012.

"Approximately one million sq ft of expected mall supply was deferred to second half of the year or next year. The overall vacancy rate for the major cities as of H1, 2012 stood at 19.6 per cent, marginally higher than the previous quarter.

NCR saw the highest mall supply deferment of over 80 per cent ensuring the city maintained 28 per cent vacancy levels. NCR saw only 1.2 lakh sq ft of mall supply in H1. Bangalore saw the highest mall supply of 1.5 million sq ft in H1 2012.

"This slowdown in mall construction need not be viewed as a negative growth indicator for the retail real estate segment. The current pace is, in fact, expected to help in maintaining a healthier supply to demand equation; especially for oversupplied micro-markets," C&W India Director Retail Agency Jaideep Wahi said.

"With high vacancy levels as well as cautious expansion plans of retailers, the deferment of supply is a necessary measure to bring stability in the retail market," he added.

According to report, the rental values across most mall destinations within these 8 cities remained largely stable, except for certain micro-markets in Bengaluru, NCR, Kolkata and Mumbai where mall rentals have seen a growth over the previous quarter in the range of 2-13 per cent.

Elgin Road in Kolkata recorded the highest growth in mall rents at 12.4 per cent over last quarter mostly owing to renewals of existing tenants at a higher value.

Some prominent high streets destination recorded higher increase in rental values as against malls, reflecting the bent of interest amongst retailers for high-street.

Select locations across Bengaluru (MG Road, Jayanagar, Koramangala, Vitthal Mallya Road) recorded increase in rental by 8-9 per cent over the previous quarter.

Camac Street in Kolkata saw the highest increase in high street rentals at 25 per cent followed by MG Road in Bengaluru at just over 9 per cent. Gurgaon and Pune also saw increase in high street rents by 7-8 per cent.

Source: http://www.deccanherald.com/content/263504/realty-firms-postpone-shopping-mall.html

Monday, 9 July 2012

Xander Gr to invest $600 mn to develop about 12 malls in India

New Delhi: Global investment firm Xander Group will pump in USD 600 million (about Rs 3,300 crore) to develop and operate about 12 luxury shopping malls across India by 2017.

Virtuous Retail, the group's retail venture, is at present constructing eight such centres at various places and will develop another 2-4 malls in the coming years.

"The scope and potential of organised retail in India is huge. We have committed USD 600 million for a pan-India retail presence. We think, the amount will be invested by 2017," Virtuous Retail Marketing Director Anupam Yog told PTI.

Virtuous Retail, which is sponsored by the Xander Group, was set up in 2007, and is gearing up to open its first project at Surat in Gujarat by the end of this year, he added.

"Surat is our flagship project, where we are investing around USD 50 million. The total size of the shopping complex will be 6,00,000 sq ft," Yog said.

The company has also adopted the 'Surat Boat Race' to promote it in the global platform, besides starting a three-day story-telling event -- Kahani Festival.

"From the Surat project, VR Surat, we are expecting a rental revenue of Rs 30-40 crore annually," Yog said.

The company will hire 300 people for operating the complex, besides indirectly creating about 3,000 jobs.

Talking about the other projects, Yog said: "At present, eight projects are under various stages of constructions in places like Pune, Mumbai, Bangalore, Kolkata and Chennai. The sizes of the malls will vary between 0.5 million sq ft and 1.5 million sq ft."

The company will launch 2-4 new sopping centres, targeting cities like Delhi, Ahmedabad, Hyderabad and Chandigarh, he added.

"Our concept is to provide a lifestyle. We plan to bring in various global brands into India and give consumers a premium retail experience," Yog said.

When asked about its model of operations, he said the company will own, develop and operate the properties.

"In some cases, we are developing the complexes under joint venture agreement with the property owner. The model will vary in different places, but we will never sell off the developed spaces," Yog said.

Some of the under-developed malls in Bangalore, Mumbai and Pune are mixed-use spaces, he added.

Xander Group has so far invested about USD 1 billion in India since 2005 in various sectors, including infrastructure, hospitality and entertainment.

PTI

First Published: Sunday, July 08, 2012, 15:17

Source: http://zeenews.india.com/business/realestate/latest-news/xander-gr-to-invest-600-mn-to-develop-about-12-malls-in-india_55369.html