Property prices to remain range bound for H1 CY12: Makaan.com
The year 2011 can best be described as a lackluster year for Indian real estate sector. There were several headwinds that prevented the sector from delivering to its full potential.
The year 2011 can best be described as a lackluster year for Indian real estate sector. There were several headwinds that prevented the sector from delivering to its full potential.
The real estate sector in Punjab is likely to witness sluggishness in the run up to Assembly elections in the state next month.
Forget Mumbai which has been in the news for record dip in the property transactions. It is the Delhi-NCR that tops the list for unsold homes.
Through the course of 2010, the realty sector evened out into a level playing field, with enough traction in the market to hold investor interest, with several on-going projects being delivered and others being launched.
The global real estate fund of Morgan Stanley is in talks with Mumbai-based Sheth Developers to invest $100-125 million in a residential project in Mumbai, sources with direct knowledge of the development said.
In 1962, Edward Lorenz, the renowned mathematician from Massachusetts Institute of Technology, published a paper on Deterministic Non-periodic Flow in the Journal of Atmospheric Sciences.
Fishing in the troubled waters of Indian real estate, Morgan Stanley Private Equity is staring at Rs.200 crore loss.
DLF Limited has recorded consolidated revenues of Rs 2,577 crore for the quarter ended September 30, 2011, an increase of 2% from Rs.2,520 crore in Q2 FY11.
The global debt funding gap is estimated to total US$142bn over the next three years (2012-2014) according to latest research from DTZ.
Indian commercial property market has lost momentum in Q3 with the capital values turning negative for the first time since 2009.