Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Property registrations down by 30% in Noida and Gurgaon due to NGT order and excessive supply

Several projects in Noida remain unsold because of the National Green Tribunal order forbidding authorities from registering properties falling within the eco-sensitive zone around the Okhla Bird Sanctuary. Homebuyers in Gurgaon are also hesitant to take possession because of inadequate infrastructure facilities in areas such as Dwarka Expressway.

Transactions are drying up also because of high circle rates in some areas due to which buyers have to pay higher stamp duty for registering property.
Registrations in Noida area have come down by 30% in the last six months  largely due to the NGT provisions and hike in the allotment rates in the area, says Vijay Chandel, former deputy inspector general, UP stamps and degistration department, Gautam Budh Nagar.
NGT had barred the Noida Authority from giving completion certificates to projects falling within a 10-kilometre radius of the Okhla Bird Sanctuary over a year ago. Last year, a draft notification issued by the environment ministry said that the sensitive zone around the sanctuary should be limited to 100 metres on three sides. The NGT order impacted several real estate projects, delaying possession. The Noida Authority can now only issue completion certificates to builders after the draft notification is finalised. They can then start handing over apartments.
Talking about revenues going down by 30% in the last six months, Sanjay Srivastava, sub-registrar, Ghaziabad, says investors in the secondary market, too, are holding on to properties and not selling them.
Registrations are directly linked to the sales in an area. Sales in NCR have also reduced drastically because of the prevailing supply-demand mismatch, high prices and buyers waiting for further cuts in interest rates.
Most end-users feel that the ticket size and the cost of the units are not justified and that the developer has not aligned the product to their needs. Some of them feel cheated because the developer sells apartments on the basis of super area and gives them a much smaller carpet area (space within four walls).Many are also of the opinion that property prices are unjustified given the lack of infrastructure in the area, says Ashutosh Limaye, head research and REIS.
Another issue of concern for market players is the existing oversupply situation in all NCR micro markets, more so in Noida and Gurgaon. Haryana’s Millennium City, however, can tackle the problem because of its strong office/economic activity base.
Developers there have also been judicious about not launching too many projects, keeping supply under control. Full-scale project launches have also been far and few, with perhaps only an additional tower being added to ongoing projects, adds Limaye.
The Noida market on the other hand may have no solutions because of huge supply. Office-led demand, too, is not that strong, he says.
The Ghaziabad market remains affordable and not impacted to a large extent because of consistent end-user demand.
Gurgaon’s problems stem from areas such as Dwarka Expressway where infrastructure development has not kept pace with real estate growth. There is still no clarity on the timelines for putting basic infrastructure and facilities in place and this is putting off buyers who, though receiving letters of possession, are not getting their properties registered. They do not want to take possession also because they know maintenance charges for the new apartments will kick in the moment they sign the papers despite there being no facilities on site, adds Anckur Srivasttava, chairman, GenReal Property Advisers Private Limited.Several projects in Noida remain unsold because of the National Green Tribunal order forbidding authorities from registering properties falling within the eco-sensitive zone around the Okhla Bird Sanctuary. Homebuyers in Gurgaon are also hesitant to take possession because of inadequate infrastructure facilities in areas such as Dwarka Expressway.
Transactions are drying up also because of high circle rates in some areas due to which buyers have to pay higher stamp duty for registering property.
Registrations in Noida area have come down by 30% in the last six months  largely due to the NGT provisions and hike in the allotment rates in the area, says Vijay Chandel, former deputy inspector general, UP stamps and degistration department, Gautam Budh Nagar.
NGT had barred the Noida Authority from giving completion certificates to projects falling within a 10-kilometre radius of the Okhla Bird Sanctuary over a year ago. Last year, a draft notification issued by the environment ministry said that the sensitive zone around the sanctuary should be limited to 100 metres on three sides. The NGT order impacted several real estate projects, delaying possession. The Noida Authority can now only issue completion certificates to builders after the draft notification is finalised. They can then start handing over apartments.
Talking about revenues going down by 30% in the last six months, Sanjay Srivastava, sub-registrar, Ghaziabad, says investors in the secondary market, too, are holding on to properties and not selling them.
Registrations are directly linked to the sales in an area. Sales in NCR have also reduced drastically because of the prevailing supply-demand mismatch, high prices and buyers waiting for further cuts in interest rates.
Most end-users feel that the ticket size and the cost of the units are not justified and that the developer has not aligned the product to their needs. Some of them feel cheated because the developer sells apartments on the basis of super area and gives them a much smaller carpet area (space within four walls).Many are also of the opinion that property prices are unjustified given the lack of infrastructure in the area, says Ashutosh Limaye, head research and REIS.
Another issue of concern for market players is the existing oversupply situation in all NCR micro markets, more so in Noida and Gurgaon. Haryana’s Millennium City, however, can tackle the problem because of its strong office/economic activity base.
Developers there have also been judicious about not launching too many projects, keeping supply under control. Full-scale project launches have also been far and few, with perhaps only an additional tower being added to ongoing projects, adds Limaye.
The Noida market on the other hand may have no solutions because of huge supply. Office-led demand, too, is not that strong, he says.
The Ghaziabad market remains affordable and not impacted to a large extent because of consistent end-user demand.
Gurgaon’s problems stem from areas such as Dwarka Expressway where infrastructure development has not kept pace with real estate growth. There is still no clarity on the timelines for putting basic infrastructure and facilities in place and this is putting off buyers who, though receiving letters of possession, are not getting their properties registered. They do not want to take possession also because they know maintenance charges for the new apartments will kick in the moment they sign the papers despite there being no facilities on site, adds Anckur Srivasttava, chairman, GenReal Property Advisers Private Limited.

Source - Hindu 

No comments:

Post a Comment