Tata Housing enters Chennai with Rs 1,500 crore project

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Tata Housing Development Company, a division of the $70.8 billion Tata Group, has announced its foray into this southern metropolis with a Rs 1,500 crore project.

“We would like to announce the first landmark development in Chennai — Crescent Lake Homes. It is our first project in Chennai and part of integrated development…,” said Brotin Banerjee, managing director, Tata Housing.

In the first phase, the company would invest around Rs 650-700 crore for developing 960 apartments, including one, two and three bedrooms, he said adding, the ground breaking ceremony would happen in another two-three months.

The first phase will be completed by 24 months and in the second phase the company proposed to build row type villas, three and four bedroom apartments at an additional investment of Rs 750 crore, Banerjee added.

The project would come up in the industrial corridor of Oragadam situated about 45 kms from Chennai. “It is a developing area with lot of MNCs present in the locality …,” he said.

“This is a four year project and the entire housing apartments will have 2,200 units,” he said.

The project coming up on a 25 acre site would be subjected to the Indian Green Building Council conditions and would be of ground plus 18 floors apartments. It would have a school, party hall, primary health centre and recreational facilities.

“The cost (of housing) ranges between Rs 14 lakh to Rs 35 lakhs,” he said.

Elaborating on its future expansion plans, Banerjee said they were keen on setting up a few more projects comprising value homes and luxury homes in Chennai. Houses in the upcoming projects would be in the range of Rs six lakh – Rs 35 lakh and it will be very much in Chennai and outskirts.

The company has also planned to approach the Tamil Nadu Government for setting up projects under PPP (Public Private Partnership) mode, he said. It had already inked an agreement with the Assam Government for constructing value homes.

He said they have also planned for a couple of residential projects in Hyderabad and added that their first phase of handing over the residential apartments in their tallest residential towers in Bangalore (which has ground plus 35 floors) would begin next month.

The company, which has projects in various cities, including Mumbai, Pune, last year has constructed a total area of 1.23 million square feet and sold 2.83 million square feet, he said. They have also planned to focus on tier-II and III cities as part of making a pan-India presence, he added.

PE players back on realty turf

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With the country’s real estate sector starting to look up post downturn, and equity markets scaling new highs, private equity (PE) firms have begun focusing on the property turf yet again. These days they are cherrypicking home and office space assets only.

Industry estimates suggests India Inc saw over 150 major deals in the first half of 2010. Of this, a little over 10 per cent were in the real estate sector alone. The current period has also seen a distinct rise in domestic real estate private equity funds, vis-a-vis mainly offshore real estate private equity capital in 2006 – early 2008.

Real estate consultancy firm, Jones Lang LaSalle chairman & country head Anuj Puri, said: “The PE firms expect a return of 20-25 per cent post tax — which is nearly the same as what they were before the downturn. The structure, however, has changed as the funds are looking more at capital protection — meaning lower risk even if that means slightly lower returns. Currently, the proportion is heavily skewed towards residential. This can be attributed to the fact that the residential sector is correctly seen as a self-liquidating asset class, while commercial and retail real estate have exit-related concerns due to unavailability of REIT/REMF (real estate mutual fund) vehicles in India.”

Niranjan Hiranandani, managing director of Hiranandani Constructions, seconds his views. He feels the focus is clearly on residential space and not retail and commercial. “Post downturn, the developer’s land bank is not the only criterion being weighed by PE firms for investing. They have begun concentrating on the project, its implementation process as well as on the overall performance of the real estate company and are expecting a return of 15-20 per cent per annum through their realty investments,” adds Hiranandani.

The real estate private equity investment market has become more focused in terms of geographies, asset class preference, deal structures, etc. “Institutional fixed income investments and domestic capital are trends which will emerge stronger going ahead. In short, there are distinct signals of a bottoming out of the investment activity curve and an uptake in activity in 2011,” said Vikram Hosangady, who is executive director of KPMG.

“It first seemed as though a majority of the PE funds were being channelled into the primary cities. However, it emerges that they have also chosen to invest into large residential projects in tier II cities, since they perceive that the demand for residential spaces in those cities is enough to justify quick absorption. In the end, what matters most is returns on investment,” said Manish Aggarwal, executive director, investment services (India), Cushman & Wakefield.

Hosangady feels the PE funds largely continues to focus on the top seven cities.