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Business / World Business

India's $1.3 trn housing bonanza draws affordable developers

Published: 22 May 2017 - 08:20 pm | Last Updated: 09 Nov 2021 - 04:47 am
A dilapidated building in the Bhendi Bazaar area of Mumbai that is being redeveloped under the Cluster Development Act 2009 by the Saifee Burhani Upliftment Trust on December 2, 2016 (AFP / Indranil MUKHERJEE)

A dilapidated building in the Bhendi Bazaar area of Mumbai that is being redeveloped under the Cluster Development Act 2009 by the Saifee Burhani Upliftment Trust on December 2, 2016 (AFP / Indranil MUKHERJEE)

Bloomberg

Mumbai:  Indian billionaire Ajay Piramal wants to sell mortgages and build affordable homes as the drugs-to-data conglomerate seeks to ride an estimated $1.3 trillion housing-investment boom.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government is putting a “huge emphasis” on affordable housing to drive job creation and economic growth, said Piramal, chairman of Piramal Enterprises Ltd, in an interview. “We’ll ride this wave,” he said, pointing to the company’s ties with developers across cities and its deep pockets. Closely-held Piramal Realty Pvt Ltd is considering affordable housing projects, while the listed Piramal Enterprises is awaiting a license to offer loans to home buyers, he said. Rising incomes and a government push to house the nation’s billion-plus people will require 60 million new homes by 2024 and unleash investments of as much as $1.3 trillion over the next seven years, according to estimates by CLSA India Pvt.
“We are looking at humongous growth in the housing finance segment,” said Jignesh Shial, a Mumbai-based analyst with Quant Broking Pvt Ltd. “This market in India is far from its saturation point.” Piramal isn’t alone in spotting the opportunity with the government offering a slew of incentives to achieve its goal of housing for all. These have included interest subsidies for home loans and making developers of affordable housing eligible for state incentives, tax benefits and institutional funding.
More than 16 mortgage financiers started operating in the country in the two years to June, taking the total to 75, according to data compiled by the National Housing Bank. The sector is dominated by Housing Development Finance Corp, the largest mortgage lender by assets, with outstanding loans of nearly 3 trillion rupees ($46bn) as of March 31. Still, mortgage penetration in the South Asian nation stands at 9 percent of nominal gross domestic product, compared with 32 percent in Malaysia, 56 percent in Singapore and 68 percent in the US, according to an HDFC presentation.
There are probably about seven or eight companies with a book in excess of 100 billion rupees, Piramal said. “There is a space for a company willing to play a larger canvas and, because of the funding we have and our track record, we should be able to come in that space.” The mortgage push is part of Piramal’s efforts to capitalize on a “once-in-a-lifetime opportunity” to build up the financial services business as Indian lenders, battling the world’s worst stressed-asset ratio, become cautious at a time rapid economic growth.
“So much of the capital is tied up with these non-performing assets that it’s difficult for banks to lend as much,” he said. This has “left an open space” for non-banking finance companies.
The contribution of financial services to Piramal Enterprises’s revenues has nearly quadrupled to 39.2 percent in the year ended March 2017 from 10.6 percent in 2013, data compiled by Bloomberg show. It grew its loan book 87 percent to 244 billion rupees in the year ended March from a year earlier.