CLSA hosted a panel discussion with esteemed panellists Vinod Rohira (CEO, Mindspace REIT), JC Sharma (VC & MD, Sobha Ltd) and Anuj Puri (Chairman, Anarock) at our 23rd Annual CITIC CLSA India Forum. The takeaway was that while demand may remain subdued in the near-term, recovery signs are visible, and strong fundamentals such as the moats of Indian IT and ITES (Information Technology Enabled Services) and improved ‘affordability’ are likely to drive demand in the office and residential spaces, respectively. Reputed developers will continue to gain market share due to consolidation. CLSA believes annuity portfolios are likely to remain more resilient than residential and thus prefer developers with strong annuity income such as Phoenix Mills, Prestige Estates, Embassy REIT and DLF.

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Resilient office space demand led by the strong moats of the Indian IT / ITES industry:

Panellists believed office absorption is likely to cross 20 msf in 2020 (vs 45 msf in 2019), which is commendable considering it is a US election year and decision-making by MNCs has come to a standstill due to the pandemic. Demand is likely to pick up driven by the increased digitisation of services and the continued cost arbitrage of India’s IT/ITES industry. 60% of supply is likely to be impacted due to a lack of capital among smaller developers.

Residential recovery likely with ‘affordability’ at multi-decadal best:

Work from home has led more people to focus on their homes and is driving upgrades (sales in the luxury segment picked up in Q2 FY21). Affordability is up with mortgage rates at a 15-year low (<7%) and stagnant prices. Supply is shrinking due to lack of liquidity for smaller developers, and the end of the interest moratorium in August 2020 will only aggravate liquidity issues.

Industry consolidation gathers pace, large to get larger and to get there faster:

Demand is gravitating to reputed developers in both the residential and office segments. Top 10 listed developers have already gained significant market share in the residential segment (27% in 9 months of 2020 versus 12%-13% in 2018-2019). Office space demand too has shifted to reputed developers such as Embassy, DLF, Oberoi Realty and others which have leased sizable areas despite the challenging environment.

Q2 FY21 results substantiate CLSA’s view:

Despite residential sales for the industry were 55% below their pre-Covid-19 level, reputed listed developers have reported near pre-Covid-19 sales (90% of the pre-Covid-19 level). The office segment too delivered steady performance with overall rent collections of >98%. Developers have managed costs and cash flow prudently, with debt levels for our covered companies increasing by only 2% over the past six months.

Industry consolidation gathers pace:

While overall industry pre sales declined 55% YoY in Q2 FY21, top 10 listed developers have reported near pre-Covid-19 sales (90% of pre-Covid-19 level). As a result, the market share of the top 10 property developers increased sharply from 13% in 2019 to 27% in 9 months of FY21. CLSA believes a considerable part of the market share gain for top developers over the past six months will be maintained, even after Covid-19, as liquidity stress will expedite the pace of consolidation.

Few developers in certain markets are providing moderate price discounts to facilitate cash flows in the short run. Moreover, developers are offering various freebies such as no EMIs for a year/ deferred payment schemes, no stamp duty, etc. to attract prospective homebuyers. This has resulted in a marginal dip in residential prices in certain markets.

Affordability is at its best:

Affordability has increased across all cities. Despite a bigger fall in annual household income as compared to the residential prices, affordability increased in 2020. A sharp decrease in the mortgage rates from around 8.9% in 2019 to 7.5% in 2020, more than offset the adverse impact of lower incomes on affordability.

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Office demand recovering but a long way to go:

As visibility on new supply remains uncertain due to Covid-19, large MNCs such as Alphabet, Morgan Stanley, Standard Chartered Bank, Amazon, JPMorgan and others have concluded or are in the process of signing large office space transactions across Indian cities. Leading global and domestic technology companies such as Accenture, Oracle, IBM, Tech Mahindra, Tata Consultancy Services, Microsoft and Capgemini have renewed large office lease agreements during the past two months. The lease renewals cover more than 3.5 msf of office space in Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Pune and Mumbai. Most companies have renewed their leases for nine years, indicating that India still offers compelling reasons such as cost arbitrage and high-quality talent for multinational corporations to set up offices in the country.