Top 3 cities seen among the highest growth rates in Asia Pacific
By ANSHUMAN MAGAZINE, CMD –CBRE South Asia Pvt. Ltd.
The commercial office segment of India’s top
cities is expected to see fresh supply addition of more than 150 million sq.ft
by end-2017. According to CBRE Research, the next four to five years (including
the concluding months of 2013) are slated to see the completion of a number of
under construction and planned commercial office projects—almost comparable to
the existing Grade A office space of India’s National Capital Region (NCR) and
its financial capital put together. The top seven cities in the next few years,
could, therefore, potentially see completion of office space worth the market
size of yet another Mumbai and Delhi NCR. At this stage, it would be interesting to consider the
exponential growth of India’s investment grade commercial office footprint over
the last ten years. From a total Grade A office space stock of about 42 million
sq.ft across the top cities in 2003, to the current market space of more than
400 million sq.ft—the sector has witnessed growth in excess of 800% over the
last decade.
With respect to Asia Pacific, although Tokyo clearly sets the
benchmark for office space development in the region, the supply growth
anticipated in the commercial markets of Hong Kong and Singapore will nearly
double that of Tokyo in the coming years.Going forward, however, the commercial
Grade A office markets of Bangalore, Mumbai and the NCR are likely to observe
some of the highest growth rates in the region. These three metropolitan
centers—together with the tier-II locations of Chennai, Hyderabad, Pune and
Kolkata—have more then 150 million sq.ft lined up for completion within the
next four to five years. Bangalore, in fact, would be comparable to the
development patterns of Shanghai’s office market, while those of Mumbai and the
NCR would be comparable to Kuala Lampur and Bangkok, respectively. Substantial
opportunity, however, lies for further growth as the commercial office real
estate space in the country’s major hubs continues to be lesser than other
developed global cities, such as New York and London.
The three major metropolitan centres of
Bangalore, Delhi NCR and Mumbai are slated to account for nearly three quarters
of this planned supply, with Bangalore and the NCR alone expected to contribute
to more than half of the total upcoming office space addition by 2017-end. Most
of these are planned and under-construction IT/ITeS spaces. Gurgaon and Noida
are likely to attract the maximum number of these projects in the Delhi NCR;
and quite a few micro-markets in Bangalore too are expected to follow suit.
While the Outer Ring Road (ORR) stretch is anticipated to witness more than
half of the supply set to hit Bangalore in the next four years, the rest of the
city’s upcoming office space will come up in the North Bangalore area, followed
by Whitefield and Electronic City.
IT/ITeS development being fairly recent in
Mumbai, in comparison to the other two major Indian cities, the metropolis
accounts for lesser supply addition. The fact that the core city does not offer
much scope for additional space creation, also adds to a comparatively
conservative supply plan for office space. The peripheral business districts of
Thane and Navi Mumbai are expected to witness maximum supply in the next four
to five years, followed by the suburban Bandra-Kurla Complex (BKC), and the
commercial micro-markets of Malad and Goregaon.
The period 2014–15 is likely to see the
maximum share of this upcoming supply, since projects slated for a release
during this period are both spill-overs of pent up supply from 2013–14, as well
as planned projects already under-construction. With a considerable level of
supply lined up for 2014–15, rental values of select micro-markets—such as
Gurgaon, ORR, Thane and Navi Mumbai—are likely to remain under pressure.
While the total office space shares of the
three main cities are anticipated to see a rise in the coming years—Bangalore
is likely to occupythe maximum share, followed equally by Mumbai and the
NCR—the tier-II locations of Kolkata, Pune, Chennai and Hyderabad are actually
going to see a comparative slide, albeit slight; in the total share of
commercial office space. In the long run, such a top-heavy growth pattern may
prove unwieldy for India’s commercial real estate sector.Another indicative
trend worth noting is the growth of urban sprawls across the top Indian cities,
with commercial development spiralling outward from existing urban centers
towards peripheral locations. Land value is usually considered to be the chief
driver of development patterns; and when property values are lower on the
periphery of urban centers,land is consumed at a faster rate as populations and
businesses shift from urban cores to suburban fringes.
This projected expansion of India’s real
estate sector, however, is subject to an effective utilization of the potential
opportunities for growth, and implementation of relevant policy measures to
resolve bottlenecks plaguing the industry.
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