Business Standard

Realtors deal in banned notes, rescue buyers straddled with old currency

According to rating agency Fitch, the note ban is expected to reduce home sales by 20-30% in 2017

Looking for a way out, developers deal in banned notes

A customer waits to deposit 1000 Indian rupee banknotes in a cash deposit machine at bank in Mumbai

Raghavendra Kamath Mumbai
Even 40 days after the ban on high-value currency notes, many real estate developers, including the bigger ones, are still dealing in banned notes with their buyers and investors in many ways, it is learnt.

“Many developers are doing it (taking old notes),” said Ajay Jain, head, executive director, investment banking and head, real estate group at Centrum Capital. 

Cash component in real estate transactions has been an age-old practice. 

Besides accepting old notes for property sales, Jain said he had got to know from the market that some developers have also taken money from wealthy investors with a promise of giving them back 70-75% of the amount in new notes next year. 
 

Senior executives named in the story declined to be quoted or name companies, given the sensitivity of the matter.

Another senior property consultant said developers, who have disclosed money under the Income Disclosure Scheme, were also accepting cash as they had to deposit the funds over a period of time.

The demonetisation move by the Centre has hit the real estate developers badly as a fourth of the market is cash-based and widely prevalent in Delhi-National Capital Region and in secondary sale and high-value properties in Mumbai. In smaller towns, cash is an even larger component. 

According to rating agency Fitch, the note ban is expected to reduce home sales by 20-30% in 2017 and increase debt levels of developers.

A chief executive of a Mumbai-based housing finance company said after the ban on high-value notes, some of the developers are telling their individual lenders to take apartments in lieu of the loans given to them as many were servicing interest in cash.

The practice was that they were paying eight per cent interest in cheque and the difference between eight and 24% in cash.

“They are telling lenders to forget the interest and take apartments in lieu of their loan. That way they are paying off their loan and clearing their inventory. In some cases, they are adding premium to the properties as the currency conversion comes with a charge,” said the executive, who did not want to be named.

He said developers were also giving backdated allotment letters to the lenders and giving interest in cheque.

Calls to some developers' telemarketing numbers in Mumbai revealed that developers are willing to take cash from buyers.

Gulam Zia, executive director at global realty consultant Knight Frank, said developers with ability to manage old currencies have had a field day after demonetisation, even increasing property prices in a few instances, to rescue home buyers straddled with old currency notes.

“The biggest losers have been those developers doing only legitimate business as buyers have cancelled their deals only to shift their purchases to those who could give them a respite from hoards of old currency notes," Zia said.

Property experts said many buyers have also postponed their decision on hopes of prices coming down in the coming months. 

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First Published: Dec 23 2016 | 9:41 AM IST

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