Pre-sales
of residential units is a widely followed practice universally.
However, in India, developers go a step further, offering units for
sale at a prelaunch stage. During pre-launch, developers offer investors
an opportunity to purchase residential units ahead of even procuring all
necessary approvals, says Suvishesh Valsan, Senior Manager - Research, Jones Lang LaSalle India.
At
times, land title due diligence or product-mix (retail, residential,
commercial) considerations may still be underway. During pre-launch,
developers apprise an inner circle of brokers/investors that a property
not officially launched in the market is available for sale. While one
imagines the news spreads through word-of-mouth
or email, recently we have seen prelaunch announcements made on public
hoardings and in newspapers.
For
developers, prelaunch provides funds, which could be used for
part-payment of land (or to acquire another piece of land) or meeting
approvals related costs (which in India are usually higher). Also,
developers benefit through test-marketing a project before spending
time, effort and resources on approvals, due diligence
and construction. Developers expect to sell 15-20% of units during
prelaunch.
For
investors, prelaunch provides an upper hand in terms of apartment
choice as well as price discount. Market observation suggests prelaunch
investors could earn a discount of about 15% over the base price at the
start of construction. In recent years, investors enjoyed healthy
returns by holding from pre-launch until completion
(usually 3-4 years) considering that over the past four years, the
price of residential units pan-India increased by over 50% on average.
The risk involved is related to approval delays, product-mix changes or
project cancellation at worst.
In
June 2013, India’s Group of Ministers (the Union Cabinet) approved
the Real Estate Regulatory Bill, which prohibits residential unit sales
by developers before obtaining all approvals. Though still not approved
by the parliament, the Bill has aroused debate about the viability of
developers’ current business practices and
the Bill’s likely impact on land cost and housing affordability.
It
is pertinent to mention that the Indian central bank prohibits
funding for land purchases to avoid land hoarding, and prelaunch was an
alternative funding mechanism for developers. Thus, in its current
form, would the Bill create funding constraints for Indian developers?
Let’s
look at China as a comparison. The practice of prelaunch does
not exist in China and banks are prohibited from making loans for the
purchase of land use rights. However, capital markets in China are
highly liquid and developers have many sources of funding including the
corporate bond market onshore and in Hong Kong,
project-level equity joint ventures with domestic or foreign funds and
institutions, as well as lending from trusts and other non-bank
financial intermediaries.
In
China, the Government is typically responsible for land acquisition,
rehabilitation and resettlement, while developers purchase land from
government with clear title. Since the land title is clear, developers
can mortgage their land to acquire additional funds for construction
work. In India, however, developers are responsible
for land acquisition and rehabilitation, causing delays, manipulations
and litigations.
Prelaunch
leads to information asymmetry and, thus, should be abolished.
Simultaneously, there is a need to provide practical solutions to the
genuine funding needs of developers. Either the bank funding channel
needs to open-up, or a better market environment must prevail to attract
more private investors.
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