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Good deals may come to those who wait

The limited period offer of lower home loan rates from public sector banks might help save a little over a thousand on your EMI, if you go for a home now. But if wait, chances are, you will save much more from a widely expected fall in real estate prices in coming months, reports Vandana Ramnani.

Updated on: Dec 19, 2008 01:06 AM IST
Hindustan Times | By , New Delhi
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The limited period offer of lower home loan rates from public sector banks might help save a little over a thousand on your EMI, if you go for a home now. But if wait, chances are, you will save much more from a widely expected fall in real estate prices in coming months.

HT Image
HT Image

The consensus among property experts in New Delhi and Mumbai, contacted by Hindustan Times, is that flats in the Rs 35-60 lakh category — which is the most desired segment of houses for middle class families in these cities — could fall at least 10 per cent over the next six months. In the case of high-end apartment houses, the drop could be bigger, they said.

The benefit from reduction in property prices over the next few months are likely to outweigh the benefit of the lower interest rates being offered by PSU banks for a limited period ending on June 30 (see box on right).

By waiting, you could also gain from being able to pick houses in areas, where the rates are much in excess of you budget.

“We expect the rates to fall by approximately 20 percent by February-March next year and that would be the best time to buy,” Pawan Swamy at property consulting firm Jones Lang LaSalle Meghraj.

According to property portal Makaan.com, 61 per cent of 688 respondents in Delhi participating in a survey said they are willing to wait for up to 6 months.

And 35 per cent said they expect prices to fall further in the short term.

From the peak reached in January this year, prices are expected “to come off between 25 to 35 per cent in the high-end segment and probably 20 per cent in middle segment,” said Anshul Jain, India CEO of DTZ International Property Advisers.

For example, a buyer with a Rs 25-lakh budget in the National Capital Region would have to settle for a place in Crossings Republik, New Gurgaon or the poorly connected neighbourhoods of Faridabad. In Mumbai, builders are coming up with affordable house, but in faraway places like Virar and Vasai.

In Bangalore, the buyer would be pushed as far as Yelahanka, 25 kilometers off the main city, while in Kolkata it would have to be in townships in the outskirts — Rajarhat and Patuli.

(Naresh Kamath in Mumbai contributed to this story)

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Vandana Ramnani

Vandana Ramnani leads the real estate vertical at Hindustan Times Digital, bringing over two decades of journalism experience across real estate, education, human resources, and foreign affairs. She specialises in India’s real estate sector, covering residential and commercial markets in Delhi-NCR, Mumbai, and Bengaluru, with in-depth reporting on regulatory developments, urban policy, housing trends, and interviews with industry leaders. Her work has also appeared in the Hindustan Times newspaper and HT Estates. Earlier, Vandana played a key role in establishing the real estate vertical at Moneycontrol (NW18 Group), shaping its editorial direction and market coverage. She has also written extensively on international education for HT Education, tracking global study destinations, policy changes, and student mobility trends, earning the Singapore Education Award 2009 for Best Media Coverage (Print). Her reporting portfolio includes human resources and employment trends for HT ShineJobs and PowerJobs, as well as lifestyle and interior design features for HT Premium Homes. Vandana began her career with the Press Trust of India, gaining strong editorial and reporting expertise. She was also selected for a prestigious fellowship at Fondation Journalistes en Europe in Paris, where she wrote for EuroMag. One of her notable reporting assignments included covering Germany’s capital relocation from Bonn to Berlin. Outside of journalism, Vandana is a passionate traveller, constantly seeking out charming hideaways across India and the lesser-known, offbeat corners of Southeast Asia.

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