Tuesday, October 23, 2007

BMRDA Master Plan may hit realty prices

Bangalore: The Bangalore Metropolitan Region Development Authority (BMRDA) will invite bids for consultancy services to prepare the final Master Plan for five planning areas of Bangalore. This could temporarily stall land conversion and construction activities.
The Interim Master Plan (IMP), which was notified in June, will be effective for only a year. The planning authorities of the BMR region — covering over 2,600 km across Anekal, Hoskote, Kanakapura, Nelamangala and Magadi — will have to prepare a master plan by June 2008.
BMRDA officials said orders have been issued to the planning authorities to invite global tenders for preparation of the master plan.
“We need to have a master plan in place for all the five local planning areas within one year of the interim plan coming into being. Once the plan is prepared we will evaluate it and send it for approval,’’ the officials said.
The Master Plan has to be proposed up to 2021. Currently, the region has a population of 8 lakh and by 2021, it is expected to grow to 30 lakh. This will have to be taken into consideration. The BMRDA will act only as a monitoring authority and not involve itself in planning and development for these planning areas.
“There are many cases where certain real estate projects have come up, which is not in tune with the IMP itself. The infrastructure there is inadequate so it is inevitable to revert to its designated zonal usage. All these changes have to be now made in the Master Plan,’’ officials explained.
During the preparation of the IMP, the government had banned land conversion in the region. The realty sector was badly hit, leading to wide spread protests. The BMRDA office was often flooded with developers, associations and individuals as land conversion and layout approvals were banned for over a year. The authority had stopped land conversion and layout plan approvals from July 2006 till June 2007.
If that was the scenario for the IMP, will the realty sector be hit for the second time with the BMRDA preparing to put the final master plan in place? That is the question worrying all those concerned

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Property boom is over

With the festive season underway, there has been a spate of advertisements for new property projects. It is important to examine these bids for funds closely, given the current state of real estate. Unless the sector is brought under regulation, it will mop up funds of a dubious kind. Unsuspecting investors can lose money and there could be a rise in loan defaults.

The rise and fall in prices over two years was triggered by excessive liquidity and speculation, caused by a flow of both white and black money. The cycles in the property sector are a result of its peculiarly unregulated nature. As a result, a hype around property becomes easier to create.

After the norms related to secrecy of Swiss banks were tightened a few years ago, black money flowed into this sector due to the lack of regulations. Vested interests would like the property sector to continue in an unregulated fashion.

The last year has seen real estate prices cool off, especially after the Reserve Bank intervened to increase the cash reserve ratio (CRR) of banks and housing finance companies raised interest rates, realising perhaps that they were instrumental in overheating the market. The easing of interest rates on both loan and deposit sides was a correction that was coming.

Housing finance companies and banks gave undue importance to property, vying with each other to extend loans to all and sundry. They created the belief that money invested in real estate will grow at higher rates than in other investment instruments.

The hype around land banks also fuelled the rush into property. When real estate companies talk about developing land banks, they cannot be taken at face value. If one were to calculate the resources required to develop infrastructure and housing in the thousands of acres which some real estate companies have at their disposal, the figure would suggest that they would need 10-15 years to develop these lands into usable habitats. For example, a company which claims to hold about 70,000 hectares in its land bank will need to invest Rs 100,000 crore to develop into viable housing and habitat. That is a tall order even for the big guns. The business models of such companies still work on speculative forces of hoarding and reselling.

Even as new tracts are developed in outlying areas, there are acres of bypassed land closer to town, more than what the housing industry might need for years to come. So much for land shortage.

Some of these companies are in a bind. With huge amounts having gone into buying land, they are short on funds needed to create projects for which bookings and promises have been made. Hence, they are divesting equity to generate funds. The IPO route of collecting funds has slowed down.

Foreign direct investment will not come unless land management laws are regulated at the central level. Black money is needed to purchase land. Political interests will prevent meaningful reforms to change the land management system of states. It remains to be seen whether market forces will push for change.

The sector suffers from a resource crunch and oversupply. With speculators moving out and end-users stepping in, prices should drop, except perhaps in the high-end market in the metros.

The US sub-prime crash was caused by too much money going into mort-gages which turned into defaults. Will India see a similar crisis in the mort-gage market? Are the right products being created for the right end-user?

Will the sector move towards the right fundamentals, or will it remain a speculator’s haven ?

There are indications of change.

The stock market is a more attractive investment option than ever, real estate companies are looking for equity partners, CRR is moving up, interest rates are down, and professional players are moving into real estate sector. The rosy years and months are over. The investor better be careful with his money.