Sunday, November 25, 2018

Unfinished Home GST Hurts

Unfinished Home GST Hurts


Buyers of under-construction properties, including flats, across the country are being asked to pay as GST 12 per cent of the agreement value. But no GST is levied after the project obtains the completion certificate.
Buyers of under-construction properties, including flats, across the country are being asked to pay as GST 12 per cent of the agreement value. But no GST is levied after the project obtains the completion certificate.
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The goods and services tax (GST) on real estate projects under construction is squeezing the cash flow of realtors as many buyers are waiting for finished homes or opting for old ones to escape the tax, multiple stakeholders have told The Telegraph.
Buyers of under-construction properties, including flats, across the country are being asked to pay as GST 12 per cent of the agreement value. But no GST is levied after the project obtains the completion certificate.
The GST is actually paid to the government by the builder who gets a refund on his inputs. Under normal circumstances, the builder need not have passed on the entire GST to the buyer because of the refunds.
But the problem has arisen because of the way the project cost has been broken up. Land cost is fixed at one-third or 33 per cent of the project cost and is kept out of the GST rate.
But in cities and on their peripheries, land accounts for a bigger share of the cost. In a project where land cost is more than 33 per cent, the deduction continues to stay at one third of the cost. This means that builder gets taxed for a portion of the cost for which he does not get a refund, and he passes that on to the buyer.
The real estate market condition has ensured that the buyer can now afford to wait. A perceptible stagnation in the property market has convinced buyers that there is little risk in waiting for a project to be completed. In a rising market, consumers close deals as early as possible for fear that the prices will rise by the time a project is finished.
Along with the stamp duty and the registration fee of 7.1-8.1 per cent and the 12 per cent GST, the cumulative incidence of tax goes above 19 per cent for an under-construction project. Before the GST was launched, a service tax was levied in addition to the stamp duty and the registration fee. But the service tax rate was only 4.5 per cent.
“Why pay extra when I can save on GST, which can be quite substantial for a premium property?” asked Abhik Mitra, an investment planner with the National Stock Exchange, who recently bought a ready-to-move-in apartment in a project off EM Bypass.
A Kasba resident said he liked two under-construction projects in the neighbourhood but balked at the prospect of paying the GST. He ended up buying a 15-year-old flat.
“My family members were against buying an old property. But I went ahead. Although I have to spend on refurbishing the flat, the cost is still lower since I didn’t have to pay the GST,” he said.
Real estate players described it as a “challenging environment”. “It is quite a challenging environment. Buyers are in the wait-and-watch mode, especially for projects that may be delivered within a year. Since property prices are not showing runaway increases, the buyers are ready to play the waiting game,” said Harsh Patodia, chairman and managing director of Unimark Group, a partner in the Trump Tower project in Calcutta.
The postponement of the closure of deals is having an adverse effect on the cash flow. The finishing work before the handover constitutes close to 40 to 60 per cent of the cost developers bear.
The restricted cash flow is forcing builders to dig into their reserves to complete projects.
Banks, wary of non-performing assets in construction, are unwilling to lend readily. Non-banking finance companies, which played saviour for realtors in the absence of banks, too are facing a liquidity crunch and have become thrifty.
A well-known project on EM Bypass near Ruby Hospital found its sales tripling after it received the completion certificate from municipal authorities earlier this year. But till then, it had to contend with a cash flow problem.
The same rule applied to the service tax also but since the tax was not so steep as the GST, it did not have as high an impact as the new levy.
Besides, new regulation has closed a loophole some builders and buyers were exploiting. They were flirting with the tactic of leaving the sale agreement unregistered while construction was going on to avoid paying the service tax and, after June 30 last year, the GST.
However, the Real Estate Regulatory Authority (Rera), introduced earlier this year in Bengal, made registration of the sale agreement mandatory.
Nandu Belani, president of the developers’ association Credai (Bengal), is not complaining about prices. “In a mature market, prices should not go up fast. But sales should happen, which has been hit badly because of the GST. The cash flow has to be there,” he said.
In order to speed up sales, some builders are absorbing the GST and offsetting the loss with the input tax credit received on the materials (cement, bricks, etc) consumed or contracts given. Some builders are lowering the prices to cushion the buyer from the tax.
Sushil Mohta, past president of Credai Bengal and owner of Merlin Projects, underscored the problem that limits builders’ ability to pass on the benefit without squeezing the profit margin.
Mohta said: “In Calcutta proper, the land component in the total project cost is much higher than one-third. The higher the land cost, the lower our ability to pass on the benefit of the abatement to the consumers. This is why high-end projects are suffering the most and new launches have come down.”
Basant Parekh, managing director of Orbit, which deals in premium and luxury projects, said that investors had disappeared. “Investors come in during the under-construction phase. But they are wary of paying the 12 per cent GST, which is not recoverable after completion,” he said.
Parekh flagged a fundamental issue: the government should consider why the stamp duty and GST are both being imposed on property transactions.
“The stamp duty is charged under the transfer of property act. The GST is charged treating it as goods. There should be a single tax,” he said.
Some sources said the policymakers’ inability to decide when a project becomes an asset could be at the root of the perceived anomaly. Stamp duty is levied on an asset and the GST on goods and services. Since goods and services are at play while a building is being constructed, the GST is levied at that stage.
Credai has made representations to the Union finance ministry to reconsider the decision but no result has come of them yet, Mohta said.

Tuesday, November 20, 2018

How realty churn is affecting NCR ?

How realty churn is affecting NCR, Mumbai builders

Builders are battling tepid demand and unsold inventory. Mint analyses the impact on National Capital Region(NCR) and Mumbai


A prolonged slowdown and the implementation of the Real Estate Regulation and Development Act have led to a churn in the real estate sector. Builders are battling tepid demand and unsold inventory. Mint analyses the impact on National Capital Region(NCR) and Mumbai.
How bad is the real estate crisis in NCR?
The National Capital Region (NCR) remains the worst impacted among major real estate markets in the country, with home sales declining in each of the last four quarters. In the September quarter, sales dropped by 12% to 13,820 units, making NCR the only market to register a slump among eight cities. Insolvency cases against some of the largest real estate firms such as Unitech Ltd, Amrapali Group and Jaypee Infratech Ltd have further weakened the sentiment of homebuyers in the region, leaving many of them worried about the fate of their investments in the stalled projects.
Have property prices corrected in NCR?
High levels of unsold inventory have put prices under pressure in the country’s largest property market. Currently, builders in NCR are sitting on a total unsold stock of 240,000 units, according to Liases Foras Real Estate Rating and Research. Weak demand has led to a 15-20% decline in home prices in the region, worse than that of the Mumbai and Bengaluru regions. In the resale market, residential property prices have seen a similar fall. The Union government’s decision to implement demonetization of high-value notes in November 2016 hampered the secondary market’s growth the most.
Is a recovery expected anytime soon?
Though home sales did pick up last year, a full recovery may be a long way off, say analysts. The liquidity crunch in NBFCs has put a question mark on the realty sector’s recovery.
Is Mumbai, India’s costliest market, becoming affordable now?
While property prices have corrected 10-15% in certain pockets of Mumbai, it is still one of the most expensive cities in terms of real estate prices, as a majority of the apartments cost at least ₹1 crore. However, given slow sales and most buyers looking for mid-income homes, developers are coming up with affordable properties, mostly by shrinking their sizes. In the suburbs, large realty firms are introducing homes that cost less than ₹1 crore, in a bid to widen their customer base.
How will the new development plan impact Mumbai market?
Under the new Development Plan 2034, around 3,700 ha are being opened up for residential develop-ment. The plan has raised floor space index (FSI) for homes and commercial buildings in the city and suburbs. Whether these steps will improve supply of affordable homes to the masses remains to be seen. Experts say realty prices may correct a bit due to a likely drop in development costs, as premium development expenses have been cut 10% for residential development.

Monday, November 19, 2018

Residential Real Estate Sales Drop

Residential real estate sales drop further in NCR

While on an average, sales have increased marginally in eight metro cities, they have dropped significantly in NCRA report indicates a drop of 16% in the number of new project launches during the quarter ending September 2018 compared to the previous quarter (June 2018). Photo: Santosh Sharma/Mint


Developers are finding it difficult to hold on the story that the real estate sector is recovering, especially in the National Capital Region (NCR). While on an average, sales have increased marginally in eight metro cities, they have dropped significantly in NCR. According to the Residential Real Estate Market Report for July-September quarter 2018-19 by Liases Foras, a Mumbai-based real estate rating and research firm, “During the quarter, residential real estate sale increased by 1% as compared to the last quarter in eight cities. However, NCR and Pune have recorded a quarter-on-quarter (q-o-q) drop of 12% and 1% in sales, respectively, in the same quarter.”
The report covers NCR, Mumbai Metropolitan Region (MMR), Bengaluru, Chennai, Hyderabad, Pune, Ahmedabad and Kolkata.
The report also indicates a drop of 16% in the number of new project launches during the quarter ending September 2018 compared to the previous quarter (June 2018). However, despite drop in project launches, the inventory of unsold residential units has increased. “Unsold stock increased by 1% on a year-on-year (y-o-y) basis and on q-o-q basis the unsold stock has grown marginally,” said the Liases Foras report. Kolkata witnessed the highest increase of 28% y-o-y in unsold stock, followed by Hyderabad and Chennai showing 25% and 15% y-o-y growth, respectively. On the other hand, Hyderabad and Chennai recorded maximum q-o-q increase—that of 5% between Q1 2018-19 and Q2 2018-19 in the unsold stock.
Read: How much a house costs in Bengaluru
The good news for potential home buyers is that prices either remained stagnant or dropped during the quarter in the cities mentioned earlier. As per the Liases Foras report, “Weighted average prices across all tier-I cities remained stagnant on an annual basis and witnessed a dip of 1% on quarterly basis.”
Another report by Anarock Property consultant, a real estate consultancy firm, for the September 2018 quarter also paints a grim picture for the NCR market. While the report said sales have improved in seven metros, including NCR, it is sceptical about the latter’s residential market. “The realty market of Delhi-NCR has been one of the worst-affected in the country amongst other prominent cities post the slowdown due to reformatory changes including DeMo, RERA and GST. While other cities including Bengaluru and MMR have gained significant momentum with the dust of these policies finally settling in, Delhi-NCR is yet to come anywhere close to its peak levels,” said the report.
Read: How much a house costs in Mumbai
Besides these reasons, there are various other factors that have contributed to the slowdown of real estate, especially in NCR. As per the Anarock report, other factors are “cash crunch resulting from developers siphoning off funds for other projects (or even other purposes), ‘Tweaked’ project details to bypass environmental/regulatory clearance norms, constantly changing regulations, the water and sand crisis, and bureaucratic quagmire encountered in project clearances.”
A large number of projects, at various stages of construction in the NCR residential real estate market, are stuck in court cases. “Out of the total 200,000 units stuck in various stages of (non) completion in entire NCR since their launch in 2013 or before, as many as 130,000 units belong to Noida and Greater Noida combined—a massive 65% of the entire stuck inventory in NCR,” said the Anarock report.

Sunday, November 18, 2018

Activists see red over green scrutiny

Activists see red over green scrutiny waiver for real estate projects

Policy analysts and green activists have slammed a government notification that exempts real estate projects with a built-up area of up to 50,000 square metres from the environment impact assessment (EIA) process and from having to obtain a prior environmental clearance,saying the move was irresponsible and regressive.


real estate projects,green scrutiny waiver,green scrutiny

Policy analysts and green activists have slammed a government notification that exempts real estate projects with a built-up area of up to 50,000 square metres from the environment impact assessment (EIA) process and from having to obtain a prior environmental clearance,saying the move was irresponsible and regressive.
The move was notified by the environment ministry on November 15, a day after it delegated the responsibility of monitoring whether real estate projects are meeting environmental standards to local bodies such as municipalities and district panchayats. Local bodies do not have powers to appraise or reject any of these projects.
All real estate projects above 20,000 sq metres have had to comply with the EIA and required prior environmental clearance from the State Environment Impact Assessment Authority.
What the latest move means is that projects the size of a large apartment complex or a five-star hotel can now go ahead without environmental scrutiny of the project site, of how it will affect traffic or air pollution, and how it will impact groundwater or surface water resources in an area.
The notifications came in the backdrop of massive public protests earlier this year against a proposal to fell more than 16,000 trees for the seven colonies to be constructed in south Delhi. The proposal was later dropped.
“The real-estate sector has been continuously asking for reducing environmental scrutiny on them since 2005 when the EIA notification was amended. They have tried this with successive governments,” said Kanchi Kohli, legal researcher at the Centre for Policy Research. “It’s irresponsible of the environment ministry to exempt projects when they should be applying the precautionary principle and increase their environmental scrutiny. The local bodies have been made responsible for monitoring of compliance with some environmental conditions but they cannot reject a project before it is constructed. The contribution of this sector to air and water pollution is now proven.”
Predictably, the new notifications were praised by the Confederation of Real Estate Developers’ Associations of India, or CREDAI.
This is a positive step toward enhancing ‘Ease of Doing Business,’ leading to better implementation of environmental laws. The resultant reduction in time consumed in procuring approvals as well as reduction of costs will also give a boost to the entire housing sector, especially the affordable housing segment, expediting our Prime Minister’s dream of ‘Housing for All’ by 2022,” said Jaxay Shah, president of CREDAI.
Another concern with exempting real estate projects up to 50,000 square meters is that several buildings under one large project can be exempted from all environmental scrutiny if they decide to break the project into smaller units.
In December 2016, the environment ministry brought out a draft amendment notification which excluded constructions covering 20,000 to 150,000 square metres of built-up area from prior environmental clearance. The notification was subsequently challenged in the National Green Tribunal (NGT), which stayed the amendment. The Tribunal, in its judgement, stressed the principle of non-regression in environmental law, which mandates that existing laws cannot be modified to bring in a regressive system.
The construction and real-estate sector is one of the largest sources of carbon dioxide (CO2) and greenhouse gas emissions in India. The construction sector emits about 22% of India’s total annual CO2 emissions, according to a case study for construction in India by Development Alternatives. Construction industry consumes enormous energy, accounting for 40% of global energy consumption,” said a statement issued by Legal Initiative for Forest and Environment, run by environmental lawyers Ritwick Dutta and Rahul Chowdhury.
Jigme Takpa, joint secretary in the environment ministry, said the current notification is different from the one issued in 2016 which NGT had stayed. “This notification gives powers to local governments and makes environmental monitoring of construction projects decentralized,” he said.
The November 14 notification recommends that local bodies ensure compliance with the Energy Conservation Building Code. A minimum of one tree should be planted for every 80 square meters of land, says the notification which also recommends that rainwater harvesting and water efficiency should be part of real estate projects.
Real estate companies have been squeezed by lenders impatient to recover their dues and customers angry at project delays, forcing many developers to shrink their businesses or exit. Some have avoided new launches for years, focusing instead on completing ongoing projects, selling land and finding partners for development amid a crippling cash crunch and the burden of heavy debt besides a tough, new real estate law.
“Currently even city master plans don’t have any environmental oversight or environmental assessment. They do ride roughshod (over green norms). For example, the Ghata lake bed in Gurgaon is zoned as residential sector 58. Now if even EIA for individual project is removed, there will be real risk to environment,” said Gurgaon-based Chetan Agarwal, an environment analyst. “There is immense pressure on the Aravallis from real estate projects,” he added.