Category Archives: India Real Estate Investments

Can NRIs buy commercial real estate in India?

One of the most common questions we get is: Can NRIs buy commercial real estate in India?

Answer: Yes, NRIs buy commercial real estate/property in India. Under the general permission granted by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), NRIs can buy/acquire property other than agricultural land/farm house/plantation property, provided the purchase consideration is met either out of inward remittances in foreign exchange through normal banking channels,or out of funds from the purchaser’s NRE/FCNR accounts maintained with banks in India and a declaration is submitted to the Central Office of Reserve Bank in form IPI 7 within a period of 90 days from the date of purchase of the property/final payment of purchase consideration.

You have to understand from where the Govt/RBI is coming. The country’s core assets like agricultural land has to be protected from large amounts of foreign capital acquiring large chunks of such land. RBI has no problems for buying regular commercial property in cities. As an NRI, your best bet will be to buy commercial property in India from reputed developers like DLF, IndiaBulls Real Estate, Orbit Corp, Marathon Nextgen etc.

Indian Real Estate Laws: Indian Transfer of Property Act & Indian Registration Act

As you would notice from the posts on this website, there are different kinds of rules for different kinds of real estate investing in India.

If all you want to do is buy an apartment for yourself, its straight forward. But its different if you want to build an apartment complex or township or SEZ (special economic zone) with FDI (foreign direct investment) or ECB (external commercial borrowing).

Please refer this post: RBI Guidelines for FDI and ECB in Indian Real Estate

Investing in real estate in India requires compliance with various laws, some 100 years old and some new. In addition to Central Govt laws, there are state laws governing real estate transactions and investment.

The Central laws governing real estate include:

Indian Transfer of Property Act

The Transfer of Property Act governs the transfer of property by various means. Sales, mortgages (other than by way of deposit of title deeds) and exchanges of immovable property are required to be registered by virtue of the Transfer of Property Act. Therefore, all the above documents must be in writing and registered.

Indian Registration Act, 1908

The purpose of this Act is the conservation of evidence, assurances, title, publication of documents and prevention of fraud. It details the formalities for registering an instrument. Instruments which require mandatory registration include:

  • (a) Instruments of gift of immovable property;
  • (b) other non-testamentary instruments which purport or operate to create, declare, assign, limit or extinguish, whether in present or in future, any right, title or interest, whether vested or contingent, to or in immovable property;
  • (c) non-testamentary instruments which acknowledge the receipt or payment of any consideration on account of instruments in (2) above.
  • (d) leases of immovable property from year to year, or for any term exceeding one year, or reserving a yearly rent

Sales, mortgages (other than by way of deposit of title deeds) and exchanges of immovable property are required to be registered by virtue of the Transfer of Property Act. So all the above documents have to be in writing.

Section 17 of the Act provides for optional registration. An unregistered document will not affect the property comprised in it, nor be received as evidence of any transaction affecting such property (except as evidence of a contract in a suit for specific performance or as evidence of part-performance under the Transfer of Property Act or as collateral), unless it has been registered.

Thus the doctrine of part performance dealt with under Section 53 A of the Transfer of Property Act and the provision of Section 49 of the Registration Act (which provide that an unregistered document cannot be admissible as evidence in a court of law except as secondary evidence under the Indian Evidence Act) together protect the buyer in possession of an unregistered sale deed and cannot be dispossessed. The net effect has been that a large number of property transactions have been accomplished without proper registration.

Instruments such as Agreement to Sell, General Power of Attorney and Will have been indiscriminately used to effect change of ownership. Therefore, investors in real estate have to be careful in their due diligence.

Therfore, establishing “Clear Title” on your desired Indian Real Estate is more complex and time-consuming than it is in America or Europe. Please factor this in your due-diligence.

Reference: http://www.madaan.com/realestate.html

Indian Real Estate Industry Overview – mid 2009

The global financial crisis and the resultant slowdown in the global economy during the year 2008-2009 have halted industrial and business expansion. The subsequent drying up of liquidity has led to an overall slowdown in the real estate sector in India.

There has been sales slowdown across all real estate asset classes: Residential, Commercial, SEZ/Industry Parks.

Demand in real estate has remained grim, primarily due to low consumer confidence. This can be attributed to a weak economic scenario. High levels of inflation led to the government increasing interest rates. This led to the drying up of liquidity available for businesses to expand, leading to a slowdown in the commercial real estate demand. The increase in the cost of finance also led to a drop in residential real estate demand.
Continue reading Indian Real Estate Industry Overview – mid 2009

Get Ready For Tata Nano Homes!

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After the super response to Tata Nano, now the Tata group is coming up with Nano homes under the name Shubh Griha, priced between Rs 3.9 lakh and Rs 6.7 lakh.

When and Where? The first township comprising one bedroom-kitchen flats, to be built by Tata Housing Development Company (THDC) will be in the Mumbai suburb Boisar, in Thane district. This housing project is conveniently located within 5 minutes of Boisar railway station and MIDC. Here’s the location map.

This model will be replicated across several metros, tier II and III cities in the country. To learn more, please visit their site: http://www.shubhgriha.com

Various Players in the Low Cost Housing Market: Tata Housing Development Company joins other developers like Puravankara, Omaxe and Housing Development & Infrastructure Ltd (HDIL) that have moved to the affordable housing segment, because that still represents a big market with unmet need. India faces a shortage of 24.7 million dwelling units, with three-fourths of this deficit being in the middle and low-income groups.

The Trend is strong: Others entrepreneurs including Mphasis founder Jaithirth Rao, NGO Janaagraha founder Ramesh Ramanathan and Bangalore based CSC Constructions are also said to be interested into entering this segment and are drawing up their housing projects.