Leading credit rating firm Fitch Ratings expects that India's resilient economic growth will boost demand of the corporates. In its latest research report on 'India Corporates: Sector Trends 2024', Fitch said that this is a sequel to the robust performance of the corporates in 2023 and will offset weakness from slowing growth in the key overseas markets. Rising demand and easing input cost pressure should boost margins of the corporates in the next financial year, Fitch said. Fitch said that with strong domestic demand growth, it is expected that India will be among the world's fastest-growing countries, with resilient GDP growth of 6.5 per cent during the fiscal 2024-25. This is despite a challenging global backdrop and the cumulative impact of the recent monetary tightening, it said. Sectors like cement, electricity and petroleum products are expected to witness a strong demand with high-frequency data in 2023 sustained well above pre-COVID pandemic levels. Fitch said that Indi
Net office space leasing across seven major cities is likely to remain stable at 37-39 million sq ft during this calendar year, despite global economic concerns and is expected to rise 20 per cent next year, according to JLL. Net absorption, or leasing of office space, stood at 37.99 million sq ft during the 2022 calendar year in seven major cities -- Delhi-NCR, Mumbai, Chennai, Kolkata, Bengaluru, Hyderabad, and Pune. The office space demand hit a record at 47.92 million sq ft in 2019, but declined sharply to 25.38 million sq ft in 2020 and 26.03 million sq ft in 2021, according to real estate consultant JLL India data. The consultant said the office sector has seen sustained growth in demand this year despite global sluggishness, and is poised to achieve the next level of growth in 2024. "Net absorption from January-September 2023 was 26 million sq ft, which is 68 per cent of the 2022 full-year number. In 2023, net absorption in the office market is expected to be at par with 202
Market expected to finance one-sixth of envisaged capex in infrastructure, corporate sectors
The share of flexible office spaces in the total premium office supply across six major cities has risen to 6-7 per cent and is set to reach double-digit in the next 34 years amid a rise in demand for flex workspaces from large corporates, according to Colliers. Real estate consultant Colliers India on Friday released a report 'Shared Office Spaces in India Flexing Ahead' at industry body FICCI's conference in Bengaluru. "The flex penetration in the Indian office market is set to cross double digits in the next 34 years, up from 6-7 per cent currently," Colliers India CEO Badal Yagnik said in the report. Flexible space operators have 43.5 million square feet under their operations across six major cities -- Bengaluru, Chennai, Delhi-NCR, Mumbai, Hyderabad and Pune. The total seats are estimated at 6,24,000. Bengaluru has 14.7 million square feet of office space under this flexible space model. "With the growing adoption of flex spaces within mainstream commercial office real esta
Hyderabad's Gachibowli logs highest rise in avg prices between Oct 2020 and now
'More hours' does different things at the level of individual, firm or country
Women account for 35% of people employed in startups, compared to 19% in the corporate sector, shows a study
While some corporate leaders endorsed Murthy's "sane advice" at a time when "we are in a nation-building stage", others said productivity was not linked to hours employees put in
The finance ministry has issued a notification stating goods and services tax will be levied on guarantees provided by corporates to their subsidiaries prospectively. The Goods and Services Tax (GST) council, comprising central and state finance ministers, had earlier this month clarified on the taxability of corporate guarantee, saying it would be subject to 18 per cent GST. Tax experts had then sought clarity on GST levy on past transactions as many companies might not be able to recover the tax from subsidiaries or group companies. The finance ministry on Thursday notified amendments to Central GST rules, saying that the corporate guarantee would be taxable from the date of the notification. GST at 18 per cent will be levied on 1 per cent of the total amount guaranteed by the parent company or the actual consideration, whichever is higher, the notification said. "This prospective modification shall have no bearing on transactions executed prior to October 26, consequently ...
Corporates garnered Rs 3.31 lakh crore through the issuance of bonds on a private placement basis in the first five months of the ongoing fiscal, a surge of 73 per cent from the year-ago period. The funds were mopped up to strengthen balance sheets, retire existing debt and support working capital requirements, market experts said. According to data available with markets regulator Sebi, Rs 3.31 lakh crore was mopped-up through the route during the April-August period of the current fiscal. In comparison, firms raised Rs 1.91 lakh crore in the first five months of 2022-23, data showed. Market experts attributed several factors to higher fund mobilisation through private placement of corporate bonds such as increase in credit demand, soaring bank loan rates, and expensive overseas borrowing. In terms of numbers, 520 issuances took place during the period under review as compared to 508 in the year-ago period. In private placements, firms issue securities or bonds to institutional
State Bank of India, the country's largest lender will encourage corporates to implement emission reduction technologies and get better terms for availing finance, an official of the bank said on Thursday. Ashwini Kumar Tewari, the managing director (risk, compliance and stressed assets resolution group), SBI, said that the bank will see how it can help corporates in this regard but at the moment does not ask them of their plans for net zero. At present SBI gives 25 basis points concession on interest rates for electric vehicles. At a later stage, corporates with a better ESG (environment, social and corporate governance) score will get better terms for getting finance from it, he said. "We don't ask for net zero plan from the companies now. Ultimately, we will go to it. We will start conversation with the corporates and that process will start," he said at the sidelines of the banking conclave organised by CII here. 'Net zero' emissions refer to the acheiving of an overall balance
Sebi removes penalty, introduces incentives
Several firms are eyeing growth due to an increase in corporate tie-ups and rising awareness about mental health
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The FY24 Budget has projected a corporation tax mop-up of Rs 9.23 trillion, up 10.5 per cent from Rs 8.35 trillion in 2022-23 (Revised Estimates)
Co-working operator EFC (I) Ltd plans to expand its capacity by more than 2.5 times to 60,000 desks as it seeks to encash rising demand for flexible workspace from corporates. Pune-based EFC (I) Ltd, which is a serviced office/co-working space operator, is listed on BSE. It has a presence in seven states spanning over 35 co-working centres totalling 1.5 million square feet area. In a statement, the company said that it plans to "triple its capacity -- from 23,000 to 60,000 seats by March 2024." EFC (I) will add 10,000 seats during the first quarter of this fiscal year. It mentioned that 65 per cent of the company's business comes from institutional clients, while the remaining 35 per cent comprises the retail part. Umesh Sahay, Founder & CEO of EFC (I) Ltd, said, "We have built an ecosystem comprising efficient, safe, well-designed and ergonomics-friendly workspaces - ranging from made-to-order offices to co-working solutions." "In the past six years, we achieved a scale of 23,00
This would be owing to a combination of higher interest risk in the international financial market and a likely deterioration in their finances
Even international companies in the country have not commented on the issue
To tame the stubbornly high inflation, the Reserve Bank has hiked the key policy rates by 250 bps so far since May 2022 and at 6.50 per cent it is already 25 bps more than the pre-February 2020 levels
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