Brokers turn developers as realty business booms

BANGALORE/ MUMBAI: PrashanthSambargi, partner at Bangalore-based real estate brokerage firm Mars Realty, is these days busy designing residential projects for two land parcels he owns in the IT capital of India. “I am now looking at smaller size projects with 18-40 units with 20 months’ turnaround time… big builders do not enter this segment,” he says.

Sambargi is among a growing group of property brokers turning builders, armed with huge savings from their booming business and a ground-level understanding of what homebuyers want as well as the issues faced by developers.

Like Sambargi, who plans to float a separate company for real estate venture while continuing with his brokerage business, many brokers are opting for smaller projects of 10-30 units in relatively cheaper locations to get into the capital-intensive business. Many are entering into joint development pacts with landlords or developers.

Silverline Realty, another Bangalore brokerage, has already floated a real estate arm. “We are looking at growing slow and not taking huge projects as the business is at nascent stage and there are many establish name in the market,” its director Zahed Mahmood says.

Started by Farooq Mahmood who earned a brokerage of 8,000 for his first deal, Silverline today owns large land parcel across Bangalore and has five residential projects with an average price of 7,000-10,000 per sft in the development stage.

It is entering into joint development with builders like Prestige Estate Projects to penetrate deeper in the market. “Our brokerage business is growing at 20-25% quarter-on-quarter and helps us channelise our resources into the new business venture,” Mahmood says.

According to property research firm PropEquity, 13,797 residential units were sold in Bangalore in the first quarter of the current fiscal, up from 9,742 units absorbed in the year-earlier quarter. “Bangalore has been performing well with a 58% increase in new launches and 42% increase in absorption in the first quarter,” Samir Jasuja, Founder and CEO of PropEquity, says.

Bigger markets of Mumbai Metropolitan Region and National Capital Region (NCR) saw absorption of 15,501 and 26,798 residential units, respectively, in the first quarter. Property business has been booming across Indian cities, helping brokers increase their business manifold both in terms of the deal value and the number of transactions. And most tend to park their money in a market they best know-property.

“Project delay hits your clientele. There are many projects, which have been delayed for years. My focus is on-time delivery and doing projects in smaller towns where land prices had not shot up,” says Deepak Kohli, director of Deep Realtors in Delhi, who has launched a real estate firm, Abode. Kohli, who started his real estate brokerage and consultancy business 15 years ago, now has three residential projects and one four-star hotel project in Vrindavan at different stages of planning and construction stages under Abode.

“Brokerage is still a lucrative business with raw income, but I do not focus on it anymore and has put it on the backburner,” he says. Another Delhi-based mortgaged professional Mrityunjay Kumar has started a 700-unit group housing project at Noida Extension in a joint venture last year.

“I had worked with builders for mortgage and knew the business well. However technical know-how and competing with big brand in the market continues to be a challenge as I have to depend on my colleague for it,” says Kumar, who has worked with Reliance capital as branch area manager and ICICI Bank, decided to foray into real estate seeing demand for low income homes.

Two decades-old broking firm Realistic Realtor is setting up a million sq ft mixed used commercial property in Gurgaon with investment from high net worth individual and small investors. The ground-level experience helps many broker-turned-realtors to deal with regulatory and financing hurdles that challenge new entrants.

Manoj Nihalani, MD at Mumbai-based Pacific Landmarks, says, “The ground-level experience we had as a broker helped us in overcoming these as we were aware how funding management and other things could be resolved through stock selling, incentivising customers and contractors.” New launches driven by higher sales across some of the major markets have made property brokers in big cities turn to real estate development business to tap the market.

Organised developers launched around 38,000 residential units in the first quarter of 2013 in major cities with mid-range segment constituting 60% of the total. Bangalore contributed 31% of the overall new supply in the top eight cities followed by NCR and Mumbai, according to real estate consultants Cushman & Wakefield.

Source: The Economic Times

LinkedIn books office space in Bangalore technology park

BANGALORE: California-based social networking site LinkedIn recently booked 74,341 sq ft of office space in Prestige Technology Park in Bangalore at 43 per sq ft, people familiar with the transaction said, establishing the fact that leading technology firms are investing in additional space in Bangalore.

“The new office space in Bangalore will house employees across functions, including customer service, engineering, sales and marketing,” said LinkedIn India Country Manager Nishant Rao.

The company has taken up space for consolidating its existing offices while the rest will be used for growth. “The new facility can seat 750 people and will be mostly used for expansion. It has also taken into account growth for three years,” said a person having direct knowledge of the transaction. LinkedIn has 150 employees in India as on December 2012.

The transaction was handled by property consultant DTZ.

LinkedIn India is headquartered in Mumbai with two offices in Gurgaon and a technology centre in Bangalore, the first outside the US. Situated at the Bagmane Technology Park, the LinkedIn Technology’s R&D centre is its fourth office in the Indian market. The world’s largest professional networking site, with over 20 million users in India, has added five million more users in the past 12 months ended March 2013.

India, with 100 million Internet users, provides the second largest user base for LinkedIn, after the US, where it has 74 million users.

LinkedIn has launched a series of new products to make things easier for users and its premium offerings in India. ING Vysya, HCL TechnologiesBSE 2.79 % and WABAG are among the companies that are extensively using LinkedIn Talent Solutions to establish an employment brand, develop their career pages and boost their recruiters’ ability to identify and connect with the best talent.

“Having grown by almost 500% since LinkedIn India started operations in November 2009, the 20 million members account for about 9% of LinkedIn’s global members (225+ million),” said Rao.

The 22-acre Prestige Tech Park has three independent towers having two wings each of an average floor plot size of 40, 000 sq ft. It houses some big companies such as JP Morgan, Quintiles, and Adobe. Private Equity fund Red Fort Capital had invested $35 million ( Rs 157.54 crore) in the tech park in January 2007.

Typically, leasing of commercial real estate is a good indicator of a country’s business outlook. According to Cushman & Wakefield, office markets in India registered a downward spiral in absorption in the first three month of the year.

Source: The Economic Times