The tarpaulin has collapsed over their heads in the US, that they are now trying to sell their offices in Mumbai and send money back home.
Foreign banks have put their offices on the Mumbai real estate market as a serious downturn awaits the home mortgage business in the US. The option-ARMs (home loans that start with very low or zero EMIs and then reset to very high rates after a few years) are set to revert in December 2008, thus accelerating the number of foreclosures, as home buyers, who were virtually lured in to ludicrous home purchases, find they are sitting on negative equity. This means the value of their property falls below their purchase price.
On sale is Citigroup Center, located in the Bandra-Kurla Complex in Mumbai. This 2 lakh sq ft tower is expected to fetch Rs 500-800 crore, if market sources are to be believed. This means the price per sq ft is Rs 25,000 to Rs 40,000 at the highest end. However, it is unlikely that even this price may be achieved. Citibank is loud-mouthed when it palms off homes at exorbitant prices to NRIs, like it made sure it splashed the news in all the papers, when it sold a flat in Nariman Point, Mumbai, for Rs 97,000 per sq ft, but when it sells its own property, it is rather tight-lipped, which is to be expected.
The 8-storey structure will however be leased back by Citibank. The bank has been on a selling spree for the last few months, in an attempt to shore up capital for its beleagured US headoffice. Citi's CEO Vikram Pandit has pledged to sell off over $400 billion in assets over the next few years. Citi has also sold property in Tokyo Japan for $445 million to rival JP Morgan, and has leased it back. Over 45 branches have been closed in the US.
Another bank that has put its Fort office on sale is Standard Chartered Bank which has a 40,000 sq ft office space in the Fort area of Mumbai.
It is amazing that at a time when a lot of foreign financial companies are taking billions of writedowns, Barclays Bank chose to pay a rent of Rs 1 crore per month for 15,000 sq ft of office space located in CeeJay House, in Worli, Mumbai.
Read the TOI story here
Friday, July 11, 2008
Citibank Puts Indian HQ on Sale, Stanchart to Follow
Posted by Eclectic Investor at 11:03 PM 0 comments
Labels: BANDRA KURLA COMPLEX, BARCLAYS BANK, CITIBANK, REAL ESTATE, SLOWDOWN, STANDARD CHARTERED BANK, SUBPRIME
Friday, May 30, 2008
EMI Holidays: India's Subprime in the Making
An eerie trend is rearing its ugly face as builders get desperate to prop the flagging sales of apartments. In an echo of what caused the subprime crisis in the US, builders are now luring home buyers with loan options that resemble the exotic mortgages of the US.
Trends reported in Delhi point to EMI holidays, where you book an apartment by paying 10-15% down payment of the apartment's cost - determined by the builder - and arrange for your bank loan. Once you have your bank loan in place, the interest component would be paid by the builder until the flat is ready. Once possession is handed over, usually 18-24 months, you begin paying the balance EMIs.
Even in a seemingly straightforward home loan industry in India, loans can take on subtle flavors not easily visible to the borrower. There are all kinds of caveats loaded in to the agreements which emerge only in the event of a dispute. The EMI itself comprises a capital component and an interest component, which is determined by the bank.
Typically, an EMI holiday means no EMI is to be paid by the borrower until the possession of the apartment is given. This basically means the borrower does not have to pay the capital component until the apartment is in his possession. This non-payment of capital will obviously attract an interest which will be calculated and added on to the balance EMIs, which kick in after possession - there is indeed no free lunch. Home loan borrowers are seldom clear about the underlying structure of these loans.
Now, as far as the interest component of the EMI goes, this would be 'happily' shelled out by the builder. At 10% per annum, it is a steal for all builders, who now have ready access to the cash, since under RBI regulations, real estate funding is not automatically available from domestic banks.
EMI holidays have apparently impressed local Citigroup analysts, Ashish Jagnani and Aditya Narain, who have written glowing reports that such ideas would boost transaction activity. Perhaps they should consult their global chief, Vikram Pandit, who is sulking and brooding about how to make good the $400 writedowns Citibank had to endure, arising from similar kind of loans, which the bank had encouraged in the US.
In my view, EMI holidays are an indirect way of providing builders with funds, and an means to keep housing prices at current ridiculously high levels. Since the RBI has tightened its noose around banks lending for the real estate sector, they have come up with such schemes which contravene the law without transgression. Reports say that such trends are mostly a Delhi phenomenon, but this is not entirely true. HDFC Bank in fact offers a similar scheme for Nahar's Amrit Shakti Project in Powai, Mumbai. [Read the story here]
Experts and industry watchers have clearly sent out the message that EMI holiday schemes are simply a ruse by builders to sell their current inventory of apartments at exorbitant prices. Once you take a loan, home buyers would simply find themselves locked on to a rate, and with the prospect of a decelerating market, it is clear that anyone who buys property at current rates is looking at years of sliding property values.
Read the HT story here

Posted by Eclectic Investor at 11:08 AM 0 comments
Labels: BUILDERS, CITIBANK, DEVELOPERS, EMI HOLIDAYS, HDFC BANK, INDIA, REAL ESTATE, SLOWDOWN, SUBPRIME
KM
Blog Archive
-
►
2009
(4)
- ► Jun 14 - Jun 21 (1)
- ► May 24 - May 31 (1)
- ► Mar 8 - Mar 15 (1)
- ► Jan 4 - Jan 11 (1)
-
►
2008
(125)
- ► Dec 14 - Dec 21 (1)
- ► Dec 7 - Dec 14 (1)
- ► Nov 30 - Dec 7 (2)
- ► Nov 23 - Nov 30 (8)
- ► Nov 16 - Nov 23 (5)
- ► Nov 9 - Nov 16 (6)
- ► Nov 2 - Nov 9 (3)
- ► Oct 26 - Nov 2 (3)
- ► Oct 5 - Oct 12 (1)
- ► Aug 24 - Aug 31 (1)
- ► Jul 27 - Aug 3 (1)
- ► Jul 13 - Jul 20 (1)
- ► Jul 6 - Jul 13 (2)
- ► Jun 29 - Jul 6 (1)
- ► Jun 15 - Jun 22 (2)
- ► Jun 8 - Jun 15 (3)
- ► Jun 1 - Jun 8 (1)
- ► May 25 - Jun 1 (6)
- ► May 18 - May 25 (7)
- ► May 11 - May 18 (5)
- ► May 4 - May 11 (2)
- ► Apr 27 - May 4 (3)
- ► Apr 20 - Apr 27 (3)
- ► Apr 13 - Apr 20 (8)
- ► Apr 6 - Apr 13 (15)
- ► Mar 30 - Apr 6 (7)
- ► Mar 23 - Mar 30 (6)
- ► Mar 16 - Mar 23 (3)
- ► Mar 9 - Mar 16 (3)
- ► Mar 2 - Mar 9 (6)
- ► Feb 24 - Mar 2 (3)
- ► Feb 10 - Feb 17 (2)
- ► Feb 3 - Feb 10 (3)
- ► Jan 27 - Feb 3 (1)
-
►
2006
(12)
- ► Jun 4 - Jun 11 (3)
- ► May 28 - Jun 4 (6)
- ► May 21 - May 28 (3)
-
►
2005
(8)
- ► Dec 18 - Dec 25 (3)
- ► Dec 11 - Dec 18 (1)
- ► Dec 4 - Dec 11 (2)
- ► Nov 20 - Nov 27 (2)
The Great Indian Realty Crash of 2008
- 1. Housing Bubble in India?
- 2. India's Subprime Variety Loans
- 3. Months Away from Realty Bust
- 4. Realty's Greater Fool Theory
- 5. Home Loans Diverted to Builders
- 6. Sterling Biotech's Realty Excess
- 7. Paanwala Top in Mumbai Realty
- 8. Mumbai's Realty Crashes
- 9. Realty Stocks Crash
- 10. BKC Rentals Fall
- 11. High Court Puts Builders in Bind
- 12. Pune Real Estate to Crack Soon
- 13. Thane Buildings Could be Razed
- 14. Bangalore on Ghost Town
- 15. Realty Brokers In Luxury Panic
- 16. Builders Admit Slowdown
- 17. Man Sells Flat 30% Cheaper
IN PASSING
“When everything’s going up, there’s a feelgood factor and people tell each other how much their houses are going up at dinner parties,” says Professor Mark Stephens of York University’s Centre for Housing Policy. “Then the music stops, as it always does.”
“Last year, Japan was a more attractive market to put money in. If you look at the US, we can now get an internal rate of return of 25% there, so why would anyone want to come to India?” - a senior executive at an international financial services group, who did not wish to be named.
"Most people told us house prices never go down on a national level, and that there had never been a default of an investment-grade-rated mortgage bond, "Mortgage experts were too caught up." - John Paulson, trader, who bet against subprime market and made $15 billion.
The most puzzling are the real-estate projects of Parsvnath. Just have a look at the Pride Asia project near Chandigarh. They are asking almost US $300K-$350 K dollars for 2 bed room apartments. They have Villas in this project that costs more than US $1.5 million dollars. It is true that some people in India have that kind of money in India. However most of their wealth is black money and that can not be used to buy these properties. Obviously, these projects have been launched keeping NRIs in mind. - Sanjeev, comment from another site
Prachi Desai, aka Bani, the star of Balalji Telefilms's soap, Kasam Se, has been house hunting for over a year. She had almost closed a 2-BHK deal last year for Rs 1.5 crore in a Oberoi Constructions' building located at Andheri, Mumbai, but when she went back to confirm it, she was asked to cough up Rs 2.61 crore. Since then, she is still house hunting. - Mumbai Mirror