Sunday, 24 April 2011

Rents hit the roof in Mumbai, up by 11%

This was bound to happen sooner or later. Now Manmohan has to take notice of yet another piece of inflation hitting the common man. First you get priced out due to black money and next you get pushed to the outer suburbs as rents escalate. If prices don't fall soon, landlords will raise rents another 10% over the current 11% as demand for housing is ever increasing.  Maintenance cost borne by owners has jumped as well. I know where a 3k monthly maintenance  has jumped to 5k in just over 1 year. This phenomenon is across cities so renters will be forced to cough up more or leave their current residences. This is another way for the rental yield to catch up with sky high prices.

DNA India reports. 

Rising realty rates may have resulted in a sharp decline in property sales, but it has led to a growth in rental value in Mumbai and other metropolitan cities in the country. Mumbai and the outskirts of the city has seen an 11% growth in rental value in the past year, according to a study conducted by private real estate portal, 99acres.com.

The figure for Bangalore, Pune and Delhi has shot up by 13%, 11% and 9% respectively.

Surprisingly, rental value in South Mumbai, one of the most preferred locations to stay in the city, has seen a dip. The Worli residential market saw a 21.31% dip last year, while the figure for Prabhadevi, Parel and Bandra (West) fell by 18%, 12% and 11.57%.

“The rent in South Mumbai had gone through the roof. It is still unaffordable. So, people are shifting towards the suburbs and outskirt of the city,” a real estate expert told DNA.

However, the rental value in the suburbs too has shot up drastically. Borivli (West) witnessed a record 42.25% growth, while the rates have shot up by 35.04% in Powai, 28.32% in Malad and 20.40% in Kandivli (East). The Mumbai metropolitan region too has seen a ruse in rental value.

The figure for Mira Road and Seawoods shot up by 39.28% and 36.36% respectively in the past year.

A real estate expert attributed the rise in rental value to exorbitant property rates in Mumbai.

“People prefer to stay in rented homes instead of buying a house. Also, there is a huge influx of people in the city. As a result, there is a huge demand for rented homes,” he said. Government data compiled by the stamp duty department also shows that there is a 35% rise in the number of lease agreements being signed in the city.

Business head at 99acres.com Vineet Singh said: “People are relocating or moving in better homes, which in turn, will affect the rental values of properties. Also, the state of real estate is not in trend with the moving economy because availability of fresh inventory is less in the Mumbai region. Therefore, rental values escalate on an annual basis.”

arshal Shelkar, who has been staying at Seawoods for the past three years, is finding it difficult to cope up with the rising rentals. He used to pay Rs7,000 as rent for a 3BHK house. The owner demanded Rs12,000 last year. “Now he is asking for Rs20,000. I am staying in Navi Mumbai, not South Mumbai. Each day, I have spend one hour on travel. If I continue to stay in houses with such high rents, my monthly budget will go haywire. I have other liabilities like EMIs and daily expenses. There should be control over the rise in rent rates,” he said.

Wednesday, 20 April 2011

LONDON (MarketWatch) — Is this the biggest bubble in the world?

While we are looking at international markets like China and the US, the biggest pop in housing has been London and that too select areas. Middle-eastern money is flowing into London along with Indian and chinese money. If the Mumbai market is so desirable for investors as claimed by the brokers how come these investors are ploughing money in London. "They think money is “safer invested in an apartment in Sloane Street than in a bank account in Damascus.” Now I have lived on this Sloane street during my stay in London and I have lost track of the number of Ferraris and Maserati's on that road. That is pure inter-generational wealth which is driving markets. Next time a broker tells you that Dubai folks are investing in Mumbai, point him to this article.


LONDON (MarketWatch) — Is this the biggest bubble in the world?

I hesitate to use the overplayed word “bubble.” But in the case of London property, it’s hard to avoid.

What’s happening here is absolutely ridiculous.


Housing data
Markets are being impacted by housing-sales data along with fears over northern European economies and a stronger Japanese yen.

Look in the window of any real-estate agent here and you think people have gone crazy — and then you realize that the prices are in British pounds, and that to convert to dollars you have to add another 60%.

Half a million pounds ($800,000) for a one-bedroom condo with a small garden on the southern, unfashionable side of the river Thames? Really? And $2 million for a modest two-bedroom condo in Chelsea?

As John McEnroe used to say at Wimbledon, you cannot be serious.

Saturday, 9 April 2011

China - the Paper Dragon - Ghost cities

China's ghost malls, cities and office space - nearly 30 billion sq ft constructed mostly vacant.

This is a bubble worst than India's (At least India can manage to run some demand and lets common people use up space by renting for offices, shops, etc)
A must watch - in 4 to 12 months China is going to be Dubai x 1000










http://corporaterealestategroup.com/2011/03/11/china-housing-market-bubble-bust-dubai-x1000/

Updates -
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1339536/Ghost-towns-China-Satellite-images-cities-lying-completely-deserted.html




Moodys downgrades Chinese RE
http://blogs.forbes.com/benzingainsights/2011/04/14/trading-moodys-downgrade-of-the-chinese-property-sector/

Tuesday, 5 April 2011

Force UPA govt to accept the Lok Pal Bill - Support Anna Hazare


Ignoring Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's appeal, veteran social activist Anna Hazare began an indefinite fast on Tuesday pressing for a more stringent anti-corruption Lokpal bill.
The call has evoked a massive response across the country with even the high profile NAC led by Sonia Gandhi in broad agreement with civil society.
Responding to the call of Anna Hazare, hundreds turn into Satyagrahis and along with him, fast for a strong Lokpal bill to fight corruption in high places in cities across the country. For a nation that ranks at the bottom of the heap on corruption, this solidarity is not surprising.
“We do not want yet another advisory body,” said Kiran Bedi.

Sunday, 3 April 2011

Must see movie : Inside Job free

Everyone needs to watch this movie on near collapse of the US financial system which almost bankrupted the world. Film makers in India are busy making Salman and Shah Ruk dance and have no time in investigative documentaries. The journalists on the other hand are busy negotiating deals with politicians and businessmen.