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Monday, January 31, 2011

Century Real Estate set to raise Rs 700 crore


Raghuvir Badrinath / Chennai/ Bangalore January 27, 2011, 0:30 IST

Beefs up land asset base to 1,500 acres to unlock value
Century Real Estate Holdings, the realty development arm of three-decade old Bangalore-based Century Group, is looking to raise Rs 700 crore through private equity players in three tranches. The company which during the past four years have been focusing on development of projects, is understood to be effecting this deal at the holding company level. The company which raised around $200 million from Goldman Sachs during the recession of 2008-09, is beefing up its land asset base in the development holding arm to cross the 1,500 acre mark to raise additional funding.

Century Group, owned by real estate veteran Dayanand Pai, best known as an land bank aggregator in the real estate market, is said to be having more than 3000 acres of land in and around Bangalore city alone.
The Group during during 2010 is understood to have launched projects spanning 1.2 million square feet and is looking to launch projects spread over 1.7 million square feet during 2011.
The company currently has 343 acres from 12 SPVs (Special Purpose Vehicles) under its control and is set to add another 1,205 acres by merging another 32 SPVs into itself as it embarks on the fresh round of fund raise which is expected to tied up within third quarter of calendar 2011.
The first round of Rs 200 crore is expected within March 2011. Investment bankers close to the deal indicate that Century is in discussion with global & Indian private equity giants including Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, Kotak Realty Fund, Baring Private Equity, HDFC Realty Fund among others for this deal. Howeve, the management of Century Real Estate Holdings declined to comment. Century Real Estate which had earlier initiated discussion with bankers for a possible public offer, seems to have put those plans on the back-burner and is actively courting PE players now. Century has been focusing heavily on development of residential projects with as much as 90 per cent of its development focusing on developing these units, while the rest has been for commercial projects. Bankers indicate that Century may be working towards a ratio of 70:30 (residential - commercial) over the next few years.
The PE fund raising is slowing picking up in the Bangalore real estate market with as much as $1 billion waiting to be raised from a clutch of players. Shriram Capital is close to raising $100 million from TPG, Brigade Group is looking at around Rs 500 crore most probably through the QIP route, while Embassy may come in with its Rs 2,400 crore IPO during 2011 and Mantri Developers looking to raise another Rs 500 crore.
Source: Business Standard

Friday, January 28, 2011

Blackstone closing in on its first realty deal in India


Raghuvir Badrinath / Chennai/ Bangalore January 25, 2011, 0:25 IST
Blackstone, the global private equity giant based in the US which has a corpus of $9.5 billion, is understood to be closing in on its first real estate deal in India. The private equity fund, present in India with its real estate team for the past three years, is understood to be in discussions with Bangalore-based Embassy Property Development to invest around Rs 200 crore in one of its projects.
Embassy Property Development is understood to be raising private equity even as it is awaiting Securities & Exchange Board of India (SEBI) clearance for a planned public offer of Rs 2,400 crore which is expected during this calendar. The issue is expected to be managed by investment banks UBS, Citigroup, Nomura and Edelweiss.
While Blackstone could not be reached for comments, Embassy denied any such plans of raising funds from Blackstone. According to recent reports, Embassy was also in talks with Temasek and HDFC Property Ventures for a $100 million private equity infusion, the status of which is not yet clear.
Embassy has so far developed close to 25 million square feet with a high degree of focus on business parks. Of the Rs 2,400 crore planned public issue, Embassy plans to use around Rs 803 crore to invest in ongoing projects, Rs 685 crore in various subsidiaries and around Rs 123 crore pay loans (including loans of subsidiaries).
While Blackstone is expected to do a full-blooded real estate deal in the near future, the PE fund during 2008 had taken an exposure of $18 million in Bangalore-based construction-management company — Synergy Property Development Services. Synergy focuses on architectural design and complete project management.
Some of its major projects have included Medicity in Gurgaon, Select Citywalk, a retail development in Delhi; and the Park Hyatt hotel in Chennai.
Source: Business Standard

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Lemon Tree, Warburg in talks for housing JV


PATU Keswani, promoter of Lemon Tree chain of hotels, is in final stage talks with global private equity investor Warburg Pincus to float a joint venture for his affordable housing project, reports Radhika P Nair from Bangalore.
“Talks are underway for a $100 million investment,” said Keswani. Keswani said the company will concentrate on affordable housing and the first project will be in Gurgaon. The project, Lemon Tree Residences, will be “a large sized affordable housing project that will be priced between Rs. 30-75 lakh, depending on the city and location.” Warburg Pincus had invested . 280 crore in Lemon Tree Hotels in 2006.

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Maytas Infra gets shareholder nod for name change

Shareholders of Hyderabad-based infrastructure company Maytas Infra Ltd have approved the change of name of the company to IL&FS Engineering and Construction Company Ltd, expressing their views through a postal ballot.
This, in effect, completes the process of bringing about a new brand image for the scam-hit company, which went into a phase of business uncertainty in 2009, later to be rescued under the management of IL&FS, which now has a controlling stake in the company.
The Chief Executive Officer of Maytas Infra, Mr Vimal Kaushik, told Business Line that “this is a great relief for us as the stigma associated with the Satyam scam is off us now with the new name. We also have two strong promoters, IL&FS and the Saudi-based, SBG, which will ensure that the company has a better future ahead.”
He said, “Various issues including Master Restructure Agreement with banks have been concluded and we are looking at a much brighter year ahead both in the country and from orders abroad.”
After the Satyam Computer scam broke out in January 2009, the company, once rated as amongst the fastest growing infrastructure services companies, with projects including the Rs 11,136-crore Hyderabad Metro Rail Ltd, was adversely affected, losing clients and finding it difficult to execute orders due to cash crunch. Following a decision by the Company Law Board, the management of the company has changed with IL&FS garnering controlling stake in the company.
In 2010, IL&FS managed to induct Saudi BinLadin group, one of the leading infrastructure companies in West Asia, making it co-promoter of Maytas Infra. Through this association, IL&FS and SBG have set up a joint venture in West Asia and have been assured orders in Saudi Arabia, which they plan to execute together.
Maytas, which now has an order book of over Rs 8,000 crore, recently bagged a Rs 1,100-crore road project along with Hyderabad-based Gayatri Projects.
Maytas scrip ended the day at Rs 185.35 against previous close of Rs 182.45. Source: Hindu BusinessLine

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Indiareit exits Kurla project for Rs 450 cr

INDIAREIT Fund Advisors, a real estate venture capital fund backed by 3i Group Plc, has exited from its investment in a commercial project in Kurla, Mumbai, being developed by Neptune Realtors.

The fund house is exiting with returns of . 450 crore on an investment of . 145 crore made in 2006, according to two sources with direct knowledge of the deal. Both Neptune and Indiareit Fund held 50% stake each in the land being developed.   "The company has made three times the money by selling its stake in the deal that will be announced formally soon" said a person with direct knowledge of the development. 
Source: TOI

Neptune Realtors is building a commercial complex over 16 acres in Kurla with a total built up area of 1.41 million sft. The first phase totalling to one million sft will be operational by September 2012. Another person close to the development confirmed the deal. "The deal was closed recently and Jones Lang LaSalle was involved in the transaction," said the person. On being contacted by ET, Ramesh Jogani CEO and MD Indiareit said that he is looking at exiting the Kurla project and should close the deal in another month. However, he refused to comment on the specific of the deals. "We are in the business of making money through buying and selling property," said Jogani when asked why he is looking to exit the project.

Nayan Shah promoter of Neptune Realtors denied the exit. "Indiareit was looking at exiting some five months back but they still remain invested in the company. Work on the site is progressing very fast," he said.
Indiareit Fund Advisors is also looking at partially exiting four to five projects this year, from its large portfolio of residential projects. One of its major exits will come through the proposed . 495-crore IPO of Neptune Enterprise. Indiareit had invested about . 208 crore in Neptune for 15% equity.
"There are many exits planned at the project level by the end of 2011. Funds whose investment period has come to an end would look at exit. This would give them cash flow and help raise new funds," said Amber Maheshwaari director investments DTZ, an international property consultant.

Private equity firms invested about $1.24 billion in 34 deals in India last year, a 69% increase from the same period last year with 22 investments valued at $735 million according to a study by Venture Intelligence , a researcher based in the south Indian city of Chennai. In 2010, five exits worth $1.58 billion took place through buybacks compared to just a single instance in 2009.

Indiareit currently manages one offshore fund worth $200 million, which has 3i Group as the anchor investor. It also manages two other domestic funds — Indiareit Domestic Fund Scheme I with a corpus of . 430 crore and . 537-crore Indiareit Domestic Fund Scheme III.

Monday, January 10, 2011

China’s Property Bubble: Can It Be Deflated Safely, or Will It Burst?

The collapse in the property values in the United States and many European countries, which helped lead to so much financial and economic damage, could be repeated in China, according to professors from Wharton and the Guanghua School of Management at Peking University.
In a joint symposium held at the Peking University campus in Bejing on March 10 and organized by both schools, finance professor Xinzhong Xu of Guanghua assessed property values in China and concluded that China may well be inflating a real estate bubble. Wharton real estate professor Susan M. Wachter also said she saw the warning signs of a bubble, but suggested that China may be taking steps to prevent a major disruption.
China’s Property Problem
While the United States undergoes the most severe contractions in housing prices since the Great Depression, the housing market in China, with prices soaring up, appears to be the mirror image of the U.S. According to many observers, China may be on a path towards the kind of boom-bust housing market that has plagued the U.S. One measure of the run-up in house prices in China: Between January and August of last year, house prices jumped by 70% in Beijing and 47% in Shanghai.
Prices were climbing swiftly in China’s housing market despite a brief slowdown in country’s economy over the last year. “Last year, China suffered heavily as in other countries,” said Xu. However, “two industries still did very well indeed -- one is online gaming, and the other is the property market.”
Today, Xu said, house prices in Beijing and Shanghai “are comparable to London and New York. If you compare property prices in Manhattan with those within Beijing’s second ring road, they are only about 3% different.” Given that GDP per capita in China is far below that of the U.K. and U.S., this makes housing unaffordable for most Chinese. The average household income to average mortgage ratio far exceeds 100% for the country’s four big cities -- 143 in Beijing, 151 in Shanghai, 111 in Shenzhen and 167 in Hangzhou. Of the top ten biggest cities, “the only place in which people can probably still afford to buy is in Chongqing [of Central China Sichuan Province], where household income to mortgage ratio is 48%,” said Xu.
What Is Behind Soaring Prices?
Why -- and how -- are people still scooping up houses in China? “In the U.S., you have three-year mortgages,” said Xu. “In China, you have three-generation mortgages: Yourself, your parents and your grandparents. Because of the one-child policy, you have five families covering one mortgage.”
What is more, local governments in China have every incentive to drive property markets and push up prices. This is partly a result of 1994 fiscal reforms to raise local government revenues, which were falling despite overall GDP growth. The reforms sought to replace the old, discretion-based system of revenue sharing between central and local government with a rule-based revenue sharing arrangement.
The overall success of the change is debatable since certain discretionary powers remain with central and provincial governments. Nevertheless, “By most estimates, land sales and taxes account for between 40% and 60% of local government revenues” now, said Xu. In 2009, proceeds from land sales alone amounted to RMB 1.5 trillion, some 40% of local government income, and the property sector contributed 2% of all GDP growth. Local government encouragement of high property prices is underpinned by loose monetary policy. According to Xu, loans to property developers and for mortgages accounted for about 40% of all loans last year.
In order to reduce the upward pressure on house prices, Xu recommended localized urbanization. “China’s cities become larger every year and we say we want to create international mega cities.” The problem this creates is that people only want to live in the mega cities where quality of life is better, and so there is a rush to purchase housing in places like Beijing and Shanghai. Many people living far from these cities still buy a flat in a mega city if they can afford it. This results in many empty “ghost apartments” that people never use. “This trend has a cascade effect in the property markets in second tier cities,” Xu said. “As prices go up in Beijing, prices go up in other cities, too.”
That is why China needs to revive its small cities and stop promoting mega cities, Xu said.
Another way to increase housing affordability, according to Xu, is to make property taxes progressive so that middle and lower income homeowners will pay less tax.  Finally, housing should be provided to the poorest citizens in society, Xu noted. Here, there is a glimmer of hope. The budget approved at the close of the National People’s Congress on March 14 included a 10% boost in spending, including more money for low-cost housing.
“As for the future, I am not optimistic,” said Xu. There are too many institutional players with an incentive to keep prices high. And in addition to local governments, there are others with vested interests in holding property values up. Banks provide 40% of their loans for the property market, for example, and they would be hurt if property prices fell. Yet, if a bubble is growing, the consequences for banks could be far worse. “So, here are our lessons: Japan in 1989, Hong Kong in 1997, the U.S. in 2007 and China, 2017?”
Echoes of the U.S. in 2007?
Following an epic collapse in property prices in the U.S. since 2007, the U.S. real estate market remains gloomy. Some 2.8 million U.S. homes were repossessed in 2009 and there is a surfeit of bank-owned foreclosed houses going for rock-bottom prices.
Wachter noted that household debt had been growing in the U.S. since 1975. Starting in 2000, the growth in that debt, which far outpaced the range of growth in government or corporate debt, accelerated as a percentage of GDP. At the same time, the house price index was rising and people continued to accumulate more mortgage debt while home ownership rates continued to increase.
So why has this situation gone beyond a rational reversal point and been allowed to become a bubble? Wachter said household debt consisted “not just of mortgage debt, but mortgage debt of specific types. Mortgage debt became far riskier to households than had ever been produced before.” Non-prime, unregulated mortgage debt rose quickly, for example. “At the height of the bubble in 2006, non-prime had gone from almost zero to nearly 50% of mortgage originations,” Wachter noted. As the bubble emerged in 2004 to 2006, new toxic types of mortgages came onto the market, such as interest-only and pay-option mortgages.
Meanwhile, over the same period the price of risk was dropping, which was a sign of trouble ahead, according to Wachter. “We can now see that over time the risk premium for non-prime mortgage debt securities declined. While we did not know this at the time, we can retrace these numbers after the fact.” So, people could more easily get mortgages -- lending terms eroded while house prices accelerated. Later, they plummeted by 30% nationally on average, said Wachter.
Compounding these difficulties was what Wachter termed the “pro-cyclical creation of risk” – where regulatory agencies were racing to deregulate both the mortgage market and the mortgage-backed securities market in the recent years. Since many of these securities traded in a way that allowed them to avoid strict market discipline, the process created risky mortgage-backed securities that weren’t accurately valued.
U.S. Market Remains in Danger
When the housing market collapse came, it took three forms: “a collapse in housing prices; a collapse in balance sheets of borrowers whose mortgage payments accelerated two or three times beyond their incomes, and a collapse in the banking sector as a whole,” Wachter said. That led to “the credit conditions which undermined the entire economy.” According to Wachter, there had been a “break in the normal pricing connection between an investment product and a borrower’s product.
Today, “foreclosures and under-water mortgages abound, despite the rescue effort.” And, according to Wachter, the “unprecedented massive intervention” by the U.S. government saved the world from “the potential great cataclysm of a second great depression.”
But a catastrophe avoided doesn’t mean trouble averted altogether. Though critical, the stimulus spending has led to U.S. debt -- as share of GDP -- to soar from 57% in 2001 to 70% in 2008. The mortgage system has been federalized so that nearly all mortgages are provided through Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and the banking sector remains challenged. Ultimately, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will have to be reformed and the massive federal deficit will have to be tackled.
“It is a waiting game,” said Wachter. “We need to restructure, rebuild and rethink our financial architecture.”
Will China Follow in the Footprints of the U.S.?
Going forward, the first job is to identify and evaluate an asset bubble before governments can decide how to act. “These are hotly debated issues,” said Wachter. In the U.S. a few years ago, [Fed] Chairman Ben Bernanke said that it is not the role of the Federal Reserve to monitor asset bubbles. Things are changing and “there is an evolving consensus that we should attempt to identify bubbles,” said Wachter. “Especially as it becomes more clear that taking care of them afterwards involves overwhelming costs to the economy.”
The U.S. bubble was not unique and many banking crashes have been triggered by real estate bubbles before, Wachter pointed out. She believes the key cautionary signal is when asset price increases are not correlated with economic fundamentals, but are correlated instead with a decrease in the cost of debt. As the debt premium charge decreases, the asset bubble increases.
“Clearly in China, there are cautionary signs,” she warned. “We have lessons to learn from the U.S. Firstly, regulation has a role to play and undermining regulation in a way that allows risk to spread unchecked is unhelpful.” She added that when it appears a crisis is brewing, leverage should not be increased. “What we did in the U.S. was allowing loan-to-value ratios to increase as house prices increased. My understanding is that China is going in the opposite direction and that is certainly to be recommended.”
Xu agreed that the signs of a bubble are there, even though there is no simple yes or no indicator. He added: “The more difficult question that nobody can answer is: When is this bubble [in China] going to burst?”
 Source: Knowledge@Wharton








Friday, January 7, 2011

Environment Ministry Denies Permission to Lavasa Project


The environment ministry on Tuesday refused to lift its “stop-work” order on the controversial hill-city project of Lavasa in Maharashtra and said a final decision in the case will be taken by the month-end after hearing the company again. In an order, the ministry maintained that in view of “lack of clarity” on the details submitted by the Lavasa Corporation and “large-scale environmental degradation” in the region, no activities would be allowed at the site till a final decision is taken.
“Ministry is of the considered opinion that the directions issued under Section 5 of the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986 to Lavasa Corporation on November 25 to stop project activities going on at the site should continue till the final analysis is undertaken..,” the ministry order said. The ministry has fixed December 22 for hearing Lavasa’s side again and said “an order could be expected on or before December 31″.
The order came just two days ahead of the hearing of the case at the Bombay High Court which had asked the ministry to decide by December 16 whether construction at the site should be allowed. The court order was in the wake of the Lavasa petition alleging that the environment ministry has issued a show-cause notice to it in haste and “under pressure” from environmentalists such as Medha Patekar.
The ministry had issued showcause notice to Hindustan Construction Company’s unit Lavasa Corporation on November 25 asking it why the project should not be done away with for violation of various norms.