Santhosh Kumar, CEO – Operations, Jones Lang LaSalle India
Where
flats are traditionally the most sought-after type of investment
property, the attractiveness of buying land for long-term and
potentially higher gains has never lost its sheen. Flats are an
inflexible format of property and this fences in the maximum value they
can attain. Flats are snapped up in most cases, but at fixed residential
prices dictated by prevailing market rates. Land is a very different
ballgame.
In
a growth sector with new market drivers coming in, investing in a plot
of sufficient dimensions and the right kind of authorized usage criteria
for the area can become attractive to developers from the residential,
retail, office and hospitality sectors. As an area attains more or more
market drivers and begins to saturate, plots increase in value manifold
and can be sold on a seller's, not a buyer's market. Also, land is cheap in most cases and represents a very good capital investment.
However,
investing in land is not as simple as it may appear. To begin with,
there might be (and usually are) any number of legal requirements to
meet and procedures to follow before a piece of land becomes a
marketable item. Most buyers are aware of the difference between the
Agricultural and Non-Agricultural (NA) categories – one cannot put in a
development of any magnitude on agricultural land. However, even if the
land is clearly NA, one still needs clearance from the local authorities
to build on it.
Furthermore,
one should not purchase land without any idea of whether it is included
in some other developmental plan. For instance, the town planning board
may have scheduled a highway to run through it, or allocated it to the
building of some Government structure. If this is the case, one may own a
piece of land and still have no right to do anything with it –
including sell it. In the case of highway construction or
electrification, the owner may eventually wind up with a high-tension
cable array perched in the middle of the plot, or a Super Expressway
running through it.. There is no getting around the Government’s
prerogative of Eminent Domain. This is a very real risk when we consider
land purchase in one of the cheaper rural areas which are constantly
being hawked on the real estate market. Anyone hoping to develop land
will, in any case, require a building permit..
A
plot must have a clear title and be demarcated properly. Assuming that
it has already been sufficiently developed to make it marketable, it
still needs to be properly protected from encroachment. Plots gain value
only over periods of time - if left unattended, other developments
usually encroach on it and this raises legal problems that make the plot
unmarketable for the duration of the legal tussle over it.
Furthermore,
no kind of property development involving even a minimal degree of
inhabitation is feasible without a basic septic tank and drainage
system. In other words, what lies underground is as important as what
stands above it. If the plot is unsuitable for digging deep enough -
unstable or extremely rocky soil could be possible reasons - one could
be in deep trouble while trying to sell it. In fact, geologically
unstable ground would mean that it can support no structure at all.
The
absence of sufficient ground water would also be a major drawback,
especially in a resale scenario. It is a serious mistake to rely on
municipal water supply alone, since this can be pretty sporadic in rural
locations. Availability of electricity is another important
consideration.
Many
buyers are under the mistaken assumption that it is not necessary to
engage the services of a real estate consultant in the case of land/plot
purchase. The fact is, only an expert can foresee all the complications
that can arise with ANY kind of property, be it 'raw' or developed.
Many sellers of developed plots have taken steps to avoid such problems
for their customers, but one may still wind up with a 'dead duck'
property if one buys it without knowledgeable guidance, or from an
unknown property dealer.
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