Non-resident Indians (NRIs) and people of Indian origin
(PIO) investing in premium real estate projects have become cautious
and are doing a thorough check before investing, say senior executives
in real estate firms.
‘‘The mood is to verify and ensure it is a good property, land and
approvals are in place, the location is good, and the project conforms
to the master plan,’’ said Kunal Banerji, president, M3M India, after a road show in Abu Dhabi last week.
‘‘Gone are the days of euphoric buying. Today, people are doing
calculated buying. They are doing thorough due diligence, checking out
the location,’’ said Banerji, who met over 150 prospective investors in
Dubai and Abu Dhabi over the weekend.
M3M, which is selling 3-bedroom and 4-bedroom apartments and penthouses at its Golf Estate project, Gurgaon, for Rs 3.6-10 crore each, plans to sell a quarter of these homes to NRIs and PIOs.
Niranjan Hiranandani, chairman, Hiranandani Group, says there’s a
resurgence of NRI investment in India as opportunities have dried up in
West Asia. ‘‘NRIs are more interested today; enquiries and conversions
from them have gone up,’’ he said.
But there’s a difference. ‘‘Earlier, the NRI investor was euphoric –
they would cut a cheque, thinking how much one would earn in three
months. That exuberance is gone. Today, the NRI investor is taking a
medium to long-term call on the property,’’ said Ashish Jerath,
vice-president (sales), Emaar MGF.
Today, the NRI investor has a two-three year investment horizon, not
less. Hence, he’s more concerned about the record of the builder, the
location, and the project, realising only a good property would survive a
shock, say experts.
‘‘They realise property prices can quickly go up or down, so it is
important to own a good property and not invest in just any. Investors
have become cautious. They want to invest in a project which will always
have a demand (for resale),’’ said Jerath.
Abhishek Kiran Gupta, head of research at real estate consultancy
Jones Lang Lesalle, feels investors have become cautious because real
estate valuations abroad are attractive and real estate prices in India
have moved up sharply in a short span of time. They’ve gone up by 15 per
cent (NCR) to 40-50 per cent (Mumbai’s suburbs) in many markets.
‘‘Prices have shot up not just in Mumbai or Delhi, but in Bangalore
as well. The prices have moved up so quickly -- people still remember
prices a year back – they are a little uncomfortable,’’ said Gupta Hiranandani feels investors don’t have an issue if the builder and
projects are good. Emaar MGF, Hiranandanis and Lodha Group are builders
which have a significant presence abroad.
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