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Demonetisation was blessing for realty sector, RERA and GST will clean it up

Demonetisation was blessing for realty sector, RERA and GST will clean it up

RERA, Apartment, Building, Property,(Note Ban Series)

By Vinod Behl,

Though the government’s radical measure of demonetisation has disrupted the economy and has hit the real estate sector — already reeling under prolonged slowdown — it will turn out to be a blessing in disguise in the medium-to-long term.

As an asset class, real estate has been a big source of generating and consuming black money. The cash component in real estate has been there at various levels, beginning with land transactions where it amounts to 30-50 per cent. The cash payout is quite high in luxury housing too. The consumption of cash has been as high as 30 per cent in secondary market transactions.

The primary market transactions, however, are by far bereft of cash component as home purchases are financed through loans from banks and housing finance corporations. It is another matter that even in primary market deals, developers have been encouraging cash payouts by luring property buyers with good discounts on property price.

The speculative buying by investors through offerings like underwriting and pre-launches has also been involving cash payout, leading to artificial price hike and in turn making homes out of the reach of masses.

Demonetisation, coupled with the government’s move to check benami transactions through legislation and curbs on cash transactions, was meant to clean up the system.

This sudden ‘shake up’ was, however, not without its adverse impacts. Demonetisation badly affected the liquidity in the capital-intensive real estate sector, deepening the problem of massive fund shortage/cash crunch faced by developers reeling under delayed deliveries, which deterred buyers from purchasing property.

The impact was more evident in markets like NCR and Mumbai which were largely investor-driven, compared to southern markets of Bengaluru and Chennai and even Pune in the west, which have been end-user driven. The premium/luxury residential segment, in which the cash component was more in transactions, got impacted by demonetisation.

Real estate experts’ belief that the impact of demonetisation is only short-term and will not have long-term impact, stems from the fact that developers who have been following transparent and fair practices have not been affected by demonetisation and instead it worked out to their advantage.

This also turned out to be a positive development for big global real estate consultants like JLL India which doubled its profits in 2016 over 2014-15, with 60 per cent revenue growth.

One key positive impact of demonetisation and RERA (Real Estate Regulation Act) has been that speculative investors deserted real estate and end-users/genuine buyers, who were all these years pushed to the sidelines, came out in large numbers. Now, it is the property consumers who are driving the real estate market, especially residential market, aided by the government’s pro-industry and pro-consumer initiatives.

The step to promote affordable housing and according real estate industry status for the purpose of making easy and cheap funds available to the sector also helps.

Demonetisation has particularly boosted foreign funding. The transparency brought in by demonetisation, aided by RERA, GST reforms and liberalisation of FDI norms, has boosted the confidence of foreign investors, which is clearly evident from the spurt in foreign investments, particularly from pension funds.

This will inject much needed liquidity in the sector starved of funds. Targeting consumers, the government under the Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana (PMAY), is providing substantial interest subsidy to home buyers. The clampdown on floating cash in the system has contributed significantly to curbing inflation which, in turn, helped RBI in cutting interest rates, thereby boosting home buying.

The proposed measures to liberalise FSI norms and rationalise stamp duty, will give further fillip to the residential sector, particularly affordable housing.

Demonetisation had a salutary impact on property prices by curbing cash transactions and checking speculative pricing, in turn increasing affordability, which is a key to achieve the government’s flagship mission of ‘Housing for All’. RERA & GST are further aiding demonetisation to control prices.

The key provisions in RERA, to speed up project completion, by checking diversion of funds through mandatory escrow account, stringent penalties to check project delays, together with the government’s move to make all building sanctions online, will go a long way in checking time and cost overruns of real estate projects, thereby controlling home prices.

The ban on pre-launching of projects under RERA will also check artificial spurt in pricing. GST has come to tackle the flow of cash in the purchase of building materials by introducing input credit tax. Further, the government’s plans to liberalise FSI norms, especially for affordable homes, and rationalising stamp duty will have a sobering effect on property prices.

But for some little lingering effect, economists and real estate experts believe that the overall downside impact of demonetisation has faded and its impact is not going to be there in the next quarter.

Says Ashwinder Singh, formerly CEO of JLL India & now CEO of leading real estate consultancy, Anarock Consultants: “Other than in terms of the initial confusion-induced decline in sentiment, the trend that is emerging now, points towards a recovery in buying sentiment with serious buyers already returning to primary markets.”

The entire demonetisation exercise undertaken by the government and aided by other reforms, like Benami Property Act, RERA and GST, is to be looked at in the backdrop of the government’s multi-pronged policy to create institutional and regulatory framework for speedy and steady growth of the economy. And at the centre of all these initiatives is real estate, which is a key contributor to GDP. Going forward, these policy initiatives will help make real estate more organised, transparent, credible and affordable, making the sector investor and consumer friendly.

(Vinod Behl is editor, Realty Plus, a leading real estate monthly. He can be reached at vbehl2008@gmail.com )

—IANS

Real estate players will contribute towards Housing for All: Gangwar

Real estate players will contribute towards Housing for All: Gangwar

Santosh Kumar Gangwar

Santosh Kumar Gangwar

New Delhi : Even as Union Minister Santosh Kumar Gangwar on Tuesday said real estate players will play a significant role in realising the aim of ‘Housing for All’ by 2022, realtors demanded setting up of a fund by the Centre for completion of stuck projects.

“Real estate developers will play an important role in realising our government’s vision of Housing for All by 2022. This will also mean mass urbanisation but this should happen without the proliferation of slums. Real estate developers and NAREDCO can play an important role in it,” Minister of State for Finance Santosh Kumar Gangwar said at the 14th national convention of National Real Estate Development Council (NAREDCO) here.

NAREDCO said both the government and private sectors needed to support their endeavour.

Raheja Developers CMD Naveen Raheja said: “More than 250 industries depend on real estate sector. The economy can move forward and Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s vision of Housing for All can be realised. But for that to happen, we need government’s support. The government should help and set up a fund for completion of stuck-up projects.”

Developers felt that creation of such fund would help realtors and home buyers alike since incomplete projects facing problems could be completed due to the move.

Uncertainty in the environment and recent developments like Goods and Services Tax implementation and Real Estate Regulatory Act (RERA) have only added to the woes of the developers, the realtors said.

“Developers felt that a change in mindset towards the sector is needed for resolution of the problems it is facing. With the government’s support they felt that good times for the sector are round the corner,” NAREDCO said in a statement.

—IANS

Bill for realty regulator gets Rajya Sabha nod

Bill for realty regulator gets Rajya Sabha nod

real estateNew Delhi : (IANS) The real estate bill, proposing a real estate regulator designed to protect property buyers’ interests against unscrupulous promoters, was passed by India’s upper house on Thursday after the government accepted as many as 20 amendments to the legislation as proposed by a Rajya Sabha Select Committee.

The Real Estate Regulator (Regulation and Development) Bill, pending before parliament since 2013, proposes major reform of the country’s largely unregulated realty sector. Once it becomes law, the consumer will have access to a Real Estate Regulatory Authority for redressal in case of a grievance.

The bill will make it mandatory for all commercial and residential real estate projects where the land is over 500 square metres, or eight apartments, to register with the regulator for launching a project, in order to provide greater transparency in project-marketing and execution.

For failure to register, it proposes a penalty of up to 10 percent of the project cost or three years’ imprisonment.

By one of the amendments proposed, the project developer will have to put 70 percent of the  money collected from a buyer in a separate account to meet the construction cost of the  project.

A major benefit for consumers proposed is that builders will have to quote prices based on carpet area and not super built-up area, while carpet area has been clearly defined in the bill to include usable spaces like kitchen and toilets.

The bill has also introduced a new penal provision for allottees for failure to comply with orders of the regulator. Allottees would be penalised up to 5 percent of the apartment cost or a year in jail, or both, for defaulting on payment or any other violation.

“This bill is the need of the hour,” Urban Development Minister M. Venkaiah Naidu said while replying to the debate on it.

“It provides for grading of projects, grading of promoters, penalises for giving misleading advertisements,” the minister said.

“By creating a much-needed regulator for the sector at the state and central levels, this government has initiated the crucial first step to protect consumers from the prevalent opaque and fraudulent practices that have so far characterised this sector in India,” said independent member Rajeev Chandrasekhar, who was also member of the Select Committee that  examined the bill.

“This bill ensures that strict regulations will be imposed on developers to ensure timely construction and delivery. It further provides that consumers are entitled to a full refund with interest, if there has been a long delay in the delivery of a flat,” he added.

“It is a first step and it will improve,” said former union minister Praful Patel of the NCP participating in the debate.

Complimenting the government for satisfying the long-pending demand for a real estate regulator, Ritabrata Banerjee of the CPI-M said the mass of small housing excluded by the paramters of the bill should also be brought within its ambit.