Governance

Good news! Home loans are cheaper now for more buyers

On Thursday, The government of India announced that loans will be cheaper even for marginally bigger homes bought by middle-class groups in a move that should uplift requirement and help kick-start the real estate sector. The rate at which the homes are purchased has attenuated sharply for various reasons; while the buyers wait for the prices to fall; new launches are held back due to the roll-out of rules under Real Estate Regulatory Authority (RERA) in July. It is believed that demonetization has hurt some sales of homes; by the end of September the inventory of apartments is close at Rs. 6 Lakhs. The vice-chairman of Housing Development Finance Corporation, Mr. Keki Mistry mentioned that the low interests for larger homes should boost purchases. However, Mistry also felt that the caveat that those who already own a property would not be eligible to a lower interest should be put away as there are some buyers needing a second home. A proposal to allow those with an income of Rs. 12 LPA to buy or build a house up to 1200 sq ft was approved by the Cabinet on Thursday; earlier the area was restricted to 900 sq ft. Those having an income of up to Rs 18 LPA can avail loans at a lower rate to buy or build a home up to 1,500 sq ft; earlier it was 1100 sq ft. Also covered by the scheme are purchases in the secondary market.

The Managing director of State Bank of India, Mr. PK Gupta there would be an increase in purchase at a time when buying had slowed down, thanks to the new rules. The Vice-chairman and MD of Indiabulls Housing Finance, Mr. Gagan Banga, implied that given how buyers’ favoured slightly larger homes in the Tier-II and Tier-III cities, some prospective buyers had not been able to take advantage of the soft loans. “We expect many of them will not use the opportunity to buy homes now,” Banga noted, adding that the cities such as Pune, Chandigarh, Ludhiana and some pockets in south India could see a boost in sales. Recently, Crisil Research wrote it was unlikely that the demand of residential property would revive in the next 12-18 months.

The analysts at the ratings agency noted: “Though capital values have been under pressure over the past few quarters, a significant chunk of supply in many micro markets remain unaffordable”. At the end of September the total outstanding of mortgages with banks was 12.8% higher than those in September 16. The increase in outstanding between September 2015 and September 2016 was significantly higher, when they had grown 18%. Since demonetisation the pace has moderated averaging 15% monthly in spite of an effective asset price correction of around 5-10% in H12017. However, over the past year the housing finance companies disbursed at a reasonably fast rate.

The government, earlier this year, had permitted buyers with an income of between Rs 6 LPA and Rs 18 LPA to borrow at reduced interest rates. According to the data on the MahaRERA website, nearly 3.5 lakh homes of the registered 6.7 lakh apartments in Mumbai Metropolitan Region have not found buyers yet. Experts note that to make homes affordable, developers are exploring for more affordable locations. “Developers are building smaller apartments because compact two-bedroom homes are selling faster at the moment. The interest subsidy for slightly bigger homes will help clear off inventory from older projects,” implied Rohit Gera, MD, Gera Developments.

November 17, 2017 / by / in , , ,
What is RERA? How will it impact Homebuyers?

What is RERA?

RERA (Real Estate Regulation and Development) Act, The act was passed by parliament last year. RERA seeks to bring clarity and fair practices that would protect the interests of home buyers and also boost investments in the real estate sector.
RERA requires builders to submit the original approved plans for their ongoing projects and the alterations that they made later. They also have to furnish details of revenue collected from allottees, how the funds were utilised, and the timeline for construction, completion, and delivery that will need to be certified by an Engineer/Architect/practicing Chartered Accountant.

How will RERA impact Homebuyers?

Some of the important compliances are:

• Informing allottees about any minor addition or alteration.
• Consent of 2/3rd allottees about any other addition or alteration.
• No launch or advertisement before registration with RERA
• Consent of 2/3rd allottees for transferring majority rights to 3rd party.
• Sharing information project plan, layout, government approvals, land title status, sub-contractors.
• Increased assertion on the timely completion of projects and delivery to the consumer.
• An increase in the quality of construction due to a defect liability period of five years.
• Formation of RWA within specified time or 3 months after majority of units has been sold.

The most positive aspect of this Act is that it provides a unified legal regime for the purchase of flats; apartments, etc., and seeks to standardise the practice across the country.

Which projects come under RERA

• Commercial and residential projects including plotted development.
• Projects measuring more than 500 sq mts or 8 units.
• Projects without Completion Certificate, before commencement of the Act.
• The project is only for the purpose of renovation / repair / re-development which does not involve re-allotment and marketing, advertising, selling or new allotment of any apartments, plot or building in the real estate project, will not come under RERA.
• Each phase is to be treated as standalone real estate project requiring fresh registration.

July 29, 2017 / by / in , , , , , ,