By Ramesh Nair
The common industry perception that an increase in capital values fuels housing demand is a misconception. It is affordability that plays an important role in demand for housing. The synergies between housing demand with housing affordability across the top seven Indian cities in India (factoring in the difference between annual per-capita income growth and growth of residential prices, indicate a reasonably strong correlation.
Prior to the general elections of 2014, high uncertainty over real estate market growth led to a near collapse of investment demand and a weak consumer sentiment. This scenario has changed completely now, with India once again proving to be a good investment destination and real estate attracting an increasing share of the overall global capital flows into India
Many weak developers who could not sustain the financial stress during this period were going out of business, adding to consumer jitters with regards to such developers’ ability to complete projects
Post the 2014 election, a consistent push from the newly-elected government to increase supply of affordable home probably made consumers believe that prices may fall. Developers have now realised that the time for launching houses at affordable price points is upon them, and they are going to considerable lengths to do so
Individual purchasing power has improved over the last few years, with incomes rising faster than housing prices. Also, homebuyer confidence is now set to increase on the back of several sentiment-building measures, which are already showing results:
· The nation-wide rollout of RERA towards mid-2017
· Courts delivering a series of consumer-favouring verdicts, indicating that buyers can now rely on the judicial system. Trust deficit will reduce over the next 4-5 quarters
· Continued discounts and schemes from developers to increase affordability, and
· Decreasing information asymmetry in the real estate sector
Simultaneously, reducing inflation will also infuse confidence in potential home buyers. In fact, inflation – or the consumer price index – has a major influence on people’s decision to borrow for a house purchase. Inflation rate also has a strong influence on consumers’ confidence in the economy, and their own financial stability.
There exists a strong inverse relationship (correlation of 82%) between the inflation rate and growth in home loans. The lag between the inflation and home loan growth (via interest rate reduction) is almost negligible.
Guidance from RBI forecaster surveys and other market analysts suggests that inflation will remain range-bound at 4-6%, within the comfort zone of the Central Bank. The latest inflation data may have shown a spike, but it is still expected to remain range-bound within a comfortable zone. In the near term, given increased housing affordability and purchasing power as well as benign inflation levels, the environment is conducive for housing demand to revive.