Mumbai: Bangalore, Mumbai
and Delhi, which are the top three realty markets in the country, have sharply
slipped to 19th, 20th and 21st positions respectively in the list of 22 investment
destinations in the Asia Pacific region, the survey 'Emerging trends in real
estate 2013' by the Urban Land Institute and PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) said.
In 2012,
these three cities were placed at the 10th, 15th and 12th position respectively
in this study. The
report is based on responses from more than 400 people including real estate
developers, investors and brokers. The PwC list has been topped by Jakarta,
Shanghai, Singapore, Sydney and Kuala Lumpur,
a media report said.
"The uncertainties in the real
estate market is holding back international investors from investing in the
country as they were doing in the last few years. Given the current scenario,
where there is little or no clarity on policies, foreign investors will
continue to adopt a cautious approach," PwC India executive director
Gautam Mehra told reproters while releasing the report here.
According to the survey, Bangalore
is perceived to be a mature market and has demonstrated fairly stable prices
and reasonable absorption trends.
However, the report notes that the
Southern metro's over-reliance on the sluggish global IT industry translates
into low growth potential in the medium term.
The financial capital Mumbai is
plagued with over- supply across asset classes, resulting in record levels of
vacancy and stagnant yields, it says.
The
report, however, has cast a positive light on Delhi and the surrounding NCR
area in view of the expected master development plans for Delhi, Gurgaon and
Noida, indicating a flight of capital from the Western and Southern regions to
the North in the medium-term.
However, the report paints a rosy
picture going forward. It says despite various issues plaguing the sector,
there is hope ahead especially after the recent decision to permit foreign
investment in multi-brand retail, Mehra said.
"The favourable demographics
and inherent but latent demand continue to be redeeming factors. Several
micro-markets continue to provide suitable investment opportunities for investors
and end-users alike," a Financial Express report quoting him as saying.
"While the domestic realty
sector may currently be grappling with certain socio-political and economic
issues, particularly rising inflation and interest rates, uncertainty on fiscal
policies, and subdued interest from opportunistic investors, there appears to
be light on the horizon," he says.
"One area that is yet to be
developed is the real estate investment trust (REIT) regulation, which can
provide an additional exit route for investors and enable retail money to be
channelised into the sector through a regulated network," Mehra concludes.
Increasing price is the reason of drop in ranking for location like Delhi, Mumbai and Bangalore. Investors are giving more priority to surrounding locations and suburbs because the property price in these surroundings are much-much lesser than these Big cities. So there is a drop in realty market of Delhi, Bangalore and Mumbai.
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