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Wednesday, 20 March 2013

We are bachelors not Criminals...

Yesterday I met to a person he works with a reputed IT company Infosys.He asked me that he need a 1 bhk flat for rent. I asked him that will he stay with his family or with friend. He replied that with his friend. I told him that he would have very less option for flat may be you will not get a flat in society or good apartment you can get a flat either in a building which comes under a builder or society is still not formed. He put some option in front of me.
 He told me that he need flat for rent in the following project(society) Sukasa,madhupuspa,Mountvert Tropez,Windward,Aishwayam Green etc. I told him you need to marry and then you can stay with your wife or you need to ask to your parents to stay with you none of these societies(Project) allow bachelors to stay. He said “We are bachelors not criminals”.I told him that I can understand your pain because I am also an bachelor.
I found that almost 70% to 80%  societies does not allow bachelors in the society in Wakad or nearby area. Because of this it has become difficult to find a flat on rent for bachelors. Even there are many projects which does not form society still they don’t allow bachelors.
Somewhere I feel that bachelors are responsible for the action of society takes against bachelors.

Monday, 18 March 2013

Review of Property Market of Pune in 2012

 Pune real estate market performed exceedingly well in 2012. Property prices appreciated between 10-12%% in most areas, which is more than most other cities displayed this year.

There were some setbacks. One of these was the issue of VAT (Value Added Tax), which the Government made mandatory for all properties bought between June 2006 and March 2010. Over 1.5 lakh flat owners in the city were affected, and there was a visible cooling of relations between them and the builders. Another dampener was the fact that the RBI did not reduce home loan rates - a move which was expected and much required.

On the up side, the Government of Maharashtra removed the NOC system. This system required residential buyers to obtain a no-objection certificate from the project`s developer before registering a sale deed was possible. This was a very unpopular but long-standing system which involved the payment of Rs. 25000 or upward, depending on where the project was located. This cost was usually shared by the buyer and the seller, and the removal of this system has direct cost-saving implications which the market welcomed whole-heartedly.

Another positive factor was the Government`s formal notification to the fact that 28 more villages would be included under the Pune Municipal limits. While such locations are under Gram Panchayat jurisdiction, they tend to be at a disadvantage in terms of reliable water supply, electricity and public transport. The lack of full-fledged support from the Municipal Corporation for these facilities compromised the healthy growth of the real estate market in these areas. The property market in these areas is now going to improve, and there was a definite increase in interest in these areas when this Government notification was issued.

As already mentioned, there were ups and downs in 2012 - but throughout, Pune`s property market proved to be very resilient. Even as sales in neighbouring Mumbai plummeted, those in Pune continued to be healthy. During the festive season, no other city in Maharashtra showed as many new residential sales that Pune did.

The demand from the NRI community was considerable in 2012. This could be gauged by the number of inquiries that came from Indians living abroad which were followed up by local relatives or representatives. During the festive period, many NRIs visited Pune personally to close the deals.

These were all positive factors, but what really pulled Pune`s property sector through was the growing number of investors on the market. In 2012, our analysis of the market showed that only about 40% of all apartments in Pune are currently being bought and used by actual end users - flat owners who are personally using their properties for occupation.

35-40% of the remaining flats are held by investors for renting out to the growing transient working population in and around the city`s IT hubs. The remaining 15-20% of the flats are standing empty. These are either bought by NRIs who intend to move back to Pune in the near future, or are being held by speculators looking for a profitable resale.

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