Deutsche Bank, Germany's biggest bank, led a group of private equity firms in investing $425 million in Indian real estate developer Lodha Group to tap a market where property prices have doubled in two years. |
The funds would be used for three real estate projects in Mumbai, Lodha Group said in an e- mailed statement. JPMorgan Chase & Co and ICICI Bank's venture capital unit have already invested in the group, it said. |
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Deutsche joins Emaar Properties PJSC in investing in India, where the fastest wage growth in the Asia-Pacific region is helping more of the nation's 300 million-strong middle class buy homes. |
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JP Morgan expects developers may sell as much as $10 billion of shares in the next 18 months as the world's second-fastest pace of economic growth boosts demand for offices and homes. |
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Lodha has more than 25 million sq ft of land in 27 projects in Mumbai, the statement said. The developer has a land bank of more than 4,000 acres, it said. |
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More than half a dozen real estate companies have raised about $3.5 billion this year, including DLF Ltd, which sold $2.24 billion of shares in the country's biggest initial public offering. |
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Emaar MGF Land Ltd, the Indian unit of the Middle East's biggest real estate developer by market value, this week applied to sell shares for the first time. |
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The average price of a residential apartment in south Mumbai more than doubled in the past two years to Rs 22,000 ($554) a sq ft, according to Cushman & Wakefield. Office prices in the southern business district also doubled to a 10-year high. |
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