Festive season Q4 2015 saw 70,000 homes sold in the 7 major cities; halved to 32,100 units in Q4 2016; sales surged 44% in Q4 2017
Developers pulling out the stops to unfetter unsold inventory in their respective cities
Religious fervour-based buying on the wane; festive freebies, discounts still hold allure
Last-mile govt. measures can make all the difference to Festive Season 2019
The Indian festive season, ushered in by Ganesh Chaturthi, has begun and investment decisions are being made. For homebuyers, this period is both auspicious and opportune to buy homes because real estate developers inevitably roll out attractive incentives – either in the form of price reductions, money-saving opportunities like waived stamp duty and registration charges, or ‘white goods’ like furnishing and household electronics – to attract genuine buyers.
This year, the government has already done a lot of the heavy lifting when it comes to sweetening the deal for homebuyers. The slew of measures announced over the past two weeks, primarily to boost consumption, have both direct and indirect benefits for homebuyers and have already set the stage for the last quarter of the calendar year to witness increased housing sales. These measures alone will result in housing sales increasing by between 5-7% in Q4 2019.
So far, the policy-induced impetus will primarily attract end-users – buyers looking to purchase homes for their personal use. However, it is no secret that end-user sales alone will not suffice to revive an industry which has historically depended on healthy investor activity to drive sales momentum. With this in mind, the government is expected to come up with additional exclusive measures for the real estate sector – expected anytime soon – then it could boost the confidence of investors too.
How previous festive seasons fared
Traditionally, the festive quarter fares better than the previous quarters of the year when it comes to housing sales – the combination of religious sentiment and festive deals and freebies is a potent mix during this part of the year. For instance, Q4 2015 saw 70,000 homes sold in the seven major cities. However, as tempting as it was for developers to believe that this was an unshakeable performance standard, it was certainly shaken just a year later. After demonetization (DeMo) was announced in this critical quarter in 2016, housing sales halved to 32,100 units.
The implementation of RERA in early 2017 set the stage for another about-turn, with the last quarter of 2017 witnessing a 44% surge in housing sales. This trend was fortified in the festive season quarter of Q4 2018 with 69,900 units sold in this period.
Festive deals – what’s on offer?
Over the years, the religious aspect of increased home buying sentiment in the festive season has waned to some extent. However, the festive freebies and discounts doled out by developers have lost very little of their intrinsic allure. True, the previously popular subvention schemes have been eliminated by the NHB, but this fact also paves the way for generous festive discounts and add-on attractions.
India is a highly diverse real estate marketplace – consequently, what works in some cities doesn’t necessarily work equally well in others. Each of India’s top real estate markets has its own trends for developers seeking to harness tradition-fuelled homebuyer sentiment:
MMR: This key region currently has unsold inventory to the tune of 2.24 lakh units collectively worth INR 2.54 lakh crores, and there are several attractive deals on offer. Not surprisingly, given the expensiveness of property here, one of the most popular festive offers in MMR is waiving off of GST and stamp duty and registration charges – top on the list of developers. This effectively amounts to a direct discount of between 5-12% of the overall property cost.
Pune: MMR’s immediate neighbour currently has unsold housing inventory of 92,800 units collectively worth approx. INR 56,800 crores. While Pune has relatively lower property prices, this is also a very cost-sensitive market since the city’s median annual family income is significantly lower than in Mumbai. Again, it’s not surprising that waived GST and stamp duty and registration fees are the most popular festive season incentives in Pune.
NCR: With more than 1.18 housing units collectively worth INR 82,200 crores completely stalled in NCR, the average buyer sentiment here is not exactly upbeat. However, this region has also been a direct beneficiary of judicial intervention on behalf of homebuyers and also has several strong developers with viable projects. In NCR, such developers are doling out discounts by way of GST and stamp duty/registration charges waivers and some are even topping it up with free car parking, clubhouse membership and miscellaneous gifts like modular kitchens.
Bengaluru: India’s Infotech capital currently sits on 64,680 unsold housing units cumulatively worth INR 47,780 crores. A unique aspect of Bengaluru’s festive season incentives to homebuyers is that developers offer either up-front cash discounts or flexible payment options. A small handful of projects have direct cash discounts of up to Rs. 5 lakhs during the festive season. Flexi-payment options (entirely funded by developers since banks no longer participate in such schemes) like an up-front payment of 10% with no further payments for the next 15-18 months can also be found in Bengaluru.
Chennai: With unsold housing inventory of 31,470 units valued at INR 20,430 crores, some builders in Chennai are giving out upfront discounts or offering freebies like gold coins, free furnishing, etc. With prices in this predominantly end-user-driven market remaining attractively affordable, buyers are focusing more on freebies and flexible payment options
Kolkata: With unsold housing inventory of 45,560 units valued at INR 26,910 crores, Kolkata’s developers are ushering in the festive season with freebies and offers including free gold coins, waiving off of added costs such as floor rise charges, and free fittings such as air conditioners, modular kitchen etc.
Hyderabad: With unsold housing inventory of 25,130 units valued at Rs. 16,420 crores, the deals sweetening Hyderabad’s residential market this festive season include direct cash discounts, flexi-payment options and rental assurance once the project is completed.
Awaiting a brighter spark
The Indian real estate sector is still hamstrung by the generalized economic slowdown, and the unsold inventory of 6.65 lakh units across seven major cities remains a hard fact. A government that is sensitized to both macro-economic needs and the opportunity to boost consumer sentiment can take more steps to give festive season 2019 a shot in the arm.
The Modi Government has already displayed its focus on delivering macro-economic solutions rather than short-term sentiment boosters. The announcements of increased credit support for home purchases, vehicles and consumption and added liquidity of INR 20,000 crore to housing finance companies for lending to real estate developers illustrate this approach.
This is a government which prefers to detoxify and build the country’s economic immunity and strength rather than infusing temporary energy bursts via ‘fiscal steroids’. Given this approach, it is perhaps unrealistic for the real estate sector to expect a policy windfall this festive season. What the sector can reasonably expect in the immediate future are:
The creation of stress asset funds to complete stalled projects
A more democratic taxation approach to under-construction and ready-to-move properties
Immediate easing of lending norms to the real estate sector and thereby get stuck projects into gear again
All and any measures to attract long-term investors to push sales in the residential market
Mandatory enforcement of RERA across all applicable states and Union Territories
The Finance Minister has promised immediate measures to benefit homebuyers, and the real estate sector hopes the imminent and exclusive announcements that will give festive season 2019 the impetus it needs to ramp up sales and fulfil many more dreams of homeownership.
While the festive season is both auspicious and opportune for such interventions, they really cannot come soon enough for India’s struggling housing industry.
By: Anuj Puri, Chairman – ANAROCK Property Consultants
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