Office space absorption rose 46 per cent to over 10.2 million sq ft in the second quarter of 2016 on improved demand from corporates, according to property consultant CBRE.
National Capital Region (Delhi, Gurgaon and Noida) and Bengaluru accounted for almost 50 per cent of the total space take-up in April-June quarter.
"Despite a muted global economy, India continues to be a favoured outsourcing destination for corporate firms. Recent policy announcements by the government and a stable domestic economy are all expected to attract investments into the country's real estate sector and enable the ease of doing business here," CBRE South Asia Chairperson and Managing Director Anshuman Magazine said.
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It noted that nearly 7 million sq ft of fresh office space came into the market during this period. Hyderabad and Mumbai accounted for more than 65 per cent of the total supply of fresh office space across leading cities.
Mumbai witnessed a 21 per cent rise in office space absorption with 1.4 million sq ft absorbed during the second quarter of 2016, and demand for office space largely concentrated across peripheral micro-markets.
The city had over 2 million sq ft of new office space entering the market during the quarter.
Majority of office space demand in the city was led by corporate occupiers from the Banking, Financial services and Insurance (BFSI) sector, followed by pharmaceuticals and engineering sectors.
More than 17 million sq ft of corporate real estate was absorbed across the leading cities in the first half of 2016.
Suburban and peripheral office districts of major cities attracted steady occupier demand during the quarter and the micro-markets that dominated leasing activity across cities during the quarter were Whitefield and Electronic City in Bangalore; Sohna Road and DLF Cyber City in Gurgaon; CBD (Anna Salai, T Nagar, RK Salai, Alwarpet and Nungambakkam), OMR Zone 1 and Mount Ponnamalle Road in Chennai; IT Corridor in Hyderabad, Thane and Navi Mumbai, the report said.
The central business districts (CBDs) of several cities witnessed a change in rental values, with the exception of Delhi NCR, Mumbai and Hyderabad.
In the case of Bangalore, Chennai and Pune, the CBD rental values increased by about 2-6 per cent quarter-on-quarter due to sustained demand levels, while the Kolkata CBD witnessed a 4-6 per cent quarter-on-quarter rise in rentals.
With limited SEZ supply expected in the market, the segment witnessed 2-12 per cent quarter-on-quarter increase in rent across Chennai, Pune, Hyderabad and Kolkata.