Why real estate investment is good for long term..?
In our country many
investor think that property investment will give the best return in long term
and it is safe. I am not expert in real estate investment. Today, I have read
an article about written by Mr Ajay Shah (Professor, NIPFP). I want t o share
the same article with all of you. It may be useful to all real estate investor.
Most people in India are
convinced that real estate is a great asset. More caution is in order. Real
estate investment is not a guarantee of profit. It is hard to be
diversified, and illiquidity hampers portfolio structuring. Most important, the
outlook for supply over the medium term implies that there is no great upside.
Too many intelligent people in India believe that
one can never do wrong by investing in real estate. Some facts will help bring
more sense. Consider investing in the best commercial real estate of Bombay --
Nariman Point -- in 1994. The price was Rs.35,000 per square foot. Today,
almost 20 years later, the price is Rs.25,000 a square foot.
Over this period, Nifty produced returns of 362%. Inflation ate away 272%.
Net of inflation, Nifty delivered an average annual return of 1% while Nariman
Point commercial real estate delivered -9%.
This is, of course, just an anecdote. Many
individual real estate investments have done very well and have occasionally
outperformed equities. My point is a limited one. We should not mindlessly
assume that real estate is always a good investment. We should not assume that
real estate will always outperform equities -- as the above example shows
things can be as bad as underperformance (compared with the Nifty index fund)
of 10 percentage points per year over a 19 year period.
Why did Nariman Point underperform over this period?
Because of new supply. That is the heart of the problem of real estate as an
asset class. There is no long term returns in owning steel or bricks. Every
time there is a real estate boom, it triggers off fresh construction. This
supply quenches the boom.
Bombay is a pretty bad place in terms of
availability of space, because of both geography and governance. Elsewhere in
India, the case against real estate is even stronger. The government in India
is slow to build roads and water supply and police stations in outlying areas.
But with a lag, these facilities do come about. Ultimately, when the price of
structures exceeds the price of bricks and steel, new supply emerges, which is
bad for real estate prices. The rise of a professional real estate industry,
coupled with access to formal finance including foreign capital, has increased
the scale of supply and given bigger and faster corrections.
Some claim that India has
a large population and there is a shortage of land. A little arithmetic shows
this is not the case. If you place 1.2 billion people in four-person homes of
1000 square feet each, and two workers of the family into office/factory space
of 400 square feet, this requires roughly 1% of India's land area assuming an FSI of
1. There is absolutely no shortage of land to house the great Indian
population.
The biggest story about the future of real estate
prices in India is the FSI. In most of India, the FSI is below 2. This is an
abysmally small number by global standards. All over Asia, FSIs are above 5,
going up to 20 or to no limit. In the long run, politicians in India will see
the light and FSI will rise. A higher FSI results in lower rental rates for
households and firms, as was seen in Hyderabad which was a pioneer in FSI
reform. When FSI goes up, this will unleash supply on a big scale. As an
example, if Bombay moves from an FSI of 1 to 2 -- which would still make it
worse than the FSI seen anywhere else in Asia -- this would trigger off a
doubling of supply.
These arguments are not specific to India. While
datasets about real estate investments over long time periods are not easy to
come by, academic evidence is slowly building up of fairly poor returns to real
estate. Net of inflation, real estate tends to produce roughly 0 over long
periods, while equity indexes produce significant and positive returns after
inflation.
Finally there are the practical difficulties of
diversification and liquidity. Most people are not rich enough to buy 50
properties spread across India. Buying and selling involves very large
transactions costs and delays, and generally involves black money.
Skepticism is in order. If less than 1% of the land
area of India is built out, this is enough for the entire population. There is
no long-run return in hoarding bricks and steel. Real estate booms the world
over are quenched by supply. The prospect of holding real estate in India is
worse because FSIs are tiny. In the future, FSIs will go up, which will further
fuel supply. Households investing in real estate are also hurting on account of
inadequate diversification, illiquidity and the use of cash.
For more detail about any other query related investment and financial planning,
you can contact me through my email.
Regards,
Arvind Trivedi
Certified Financial Planner
I'm sure if you are professional in this are, real estate investment business is on of the most profitable today!
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