Expecting huge value erosion in the realty space, corporates have
started to float new funds to acquire assets in the domestic property
market.
Corporates such as the Aditya Birla group, GMR Infrastructure, Akruti
City, Bangalore-based Nitesh group and Saffron Advisors have either
floated or are in the process of floating funds with corpus ranging
between Rs 500 crore and Rs 1,000 crore.
“As far as Indian realty is concerned, for the right projects, funds
are still available,” said Saffron Advisors MD Ajoy Kapoor.
“Conservative European investors, after conducting extensive due
diligence and research, are more comfortable with investing in Indian real estate provided they are able to align with the right partners,” he added.
Munich-based retail aggregator Deutsche Capital Management AG (DCM) has underwritten $20 million for Saffron India Real Estate
Fund I (SIREF I), an India-focused real estate fund floated by Saffron
Advisors. DCM is raising a specific fund for investing into Indian real
estate through Saffron Advisors.
SIREF I is currently raising funds in the US, the UK, Europe, the
Middle East and the Asia Pacific. It is a $350- $400 million real
estate fund with a maximum limit of $500 million.
Bangalore’s Nitesh group is in the process of floating a Rs 1,000-crore
property fund to invest in the group’s real estate arm Nitesh Estates’
upcoming project and to buy assets. “We have initiated talks with many
European institutions and HNIs to invest in the fund. The initial
response is very positive,” said Nitesh group chairman Nitesh Shetty.
Mumbai-based developer Akruti City is also planning to float a Rs
400-crore fund to acquire more properties as valuations drop across
India. “We have got Sebi approval to float a real estate fund,” said MD
Vimal Shah. “We have initiated talks with domestic banks to raise the
funds,” he added. In the next six months to one year, the property
value would fall further which would open opportunities for acquiring
cheaper real estate assets, he added.
Tough lending norms, an unfavourable primary market and the US
financial worries have started to limit money flow to the domestic
property market. The number of real estate deals has reduced and fancy
valuations projected by developers witnessed a deep correction, said
industry officials.
The Aditya Birla group recently said that it has plans to float a
fund for real estate with the corpus likely to be over Rs 500 crore.
Industry sources also said that GMR Infrastructure is also planning to
float a $1billion infrastructure and real estate fund and that
preliminary talk are on with institutions and banks.