City rentals down 30%


Rajshri Mehta / DNA



If you live life in 11-month instalments, worrying how much more you may
have to fork out when your lease comes up for renewal, the tide has turned.
Rents across the city are sliding.

In South Mumbai, which is the worst hit, about 50% of lease market flats are
vacant. In the western suburbs, this number is 30%. One reason is that many
corporations have curtailed recruitments and sacked or transferred senior
executives. Hence, there are fewer takers for high-end apartments. A large
number of flats remain locked after many companies moved out as the owners
were demanding high rents. And nearly 130 flats in Hiranandani Complex,
Powai, are gathering dust after Lehman Brothers went bust last year.

The story across the city is much the same. In the past few months,
residential lease rates have fallen 25-30% between Bandra and Malad and up
to 25% between Colaba and Sion/Mahim. Brokers expect a further downturn of
10-15% as property owners realign expectations with market dynamics. Rents
have corrected by about 5-10% in the low-budget segment between Malad and
Borivli and in the central suburbs from Sion to Thane and Navi Mumbai.

“The number of apartments available for lease is more than double the number
available last year,” said Mahesh Ahuja of Aruba Homes Pvt Ltd. “Vacancy
levels have ballooned due to cost-cutting. Most companies now prefer to
relocate to affordable locations.
Flatowners who have understood this seismic shift have scaled down their
expectations so that they can continue to pay their EMIs.”
In Bandra, owners of 4BHK apartments are accepting Rs3-3.5 lakh as rent
against their earlier expectation of Rs4-4.5 lakh. Powai, which has a large
number of investor-owned flats, is badly hit with rents plunging to Rs1.5-2
lakh from Rs2.5-3 lakh.

Rajiv Jain of Jaisons Property Management, a real-estate broking company
dealing only in high-end residential apartments, said,
“Rates are now comparable to 2005-06 levels. Expats are relocating further
away for cheaper rates in suburbs. I recently leased out a 3BHK in Juhu for
Rs2 lakh while a flat in the same building was earlier leased at Rs2.5
lakh.” A fallout: Jain’s income has dropped 40%.

Ram Prasad Padhi of Pinnacle Realty, who recently leased a flat in Oberoi
Woods, Goregaon, to an expat for Rs30,000, said, “In better times, her
budget would have been Rs60,000 and she would have been looking at options
in Bandra. But this time, she made it clear she could not afford to stretch
her wallet beyond Rs35,000.”

*http://www.investmentMap.com <http://www.investmentmap.com/>** *

*www.IndiaPages.in <http://www.indiapages.in/>*

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