A setback to affordable housing, Quarter 2 of 2021, saw a dip in the share of affordable housing launches. Developers have gone back to lanching more premium housing. The pandemic has a role to play in this change.

By Varun Singh

Hard to believe, that developers in the Q2 of 2021 launched less affordable housing, but yes it is true.

A report by Anarock Property Consultants, says that, while premium home launches stood at 36% while the share of affordable homes dipped to 20%.

Of 36,260 units launched in Q2 2021 in the top 7 cities, the premium segment (priced b/w Rs 80 lakh to Rs 1.5 Crore) had the highest share (approx. 13,130 units); mid-segment (Rs 40-80 lakh) had a 32% share (nearly 11,760 units).

In the pre-COVID-19 period, affordable housing supply share dominated; post-pandemic, share dropped dramatically from 40% in 2019 to 30% in 2020 and now at 20% in Q2 2021.

Developers strategically are following trends – buyers of affordable homes most affected economically by COVID-19; high unsold affordable housing stock another concern at 33% of total 6.54 lakh unsold units in top 7 cities by Q2 2021-end

The pandemic has significantly altered previously dominant trends in the Indian residential market. It has dented the overall new affordable housing supply share across the top 7 cities.

ANAROCK research indicated that out of the total new launches of approx. 36,260 units across the top 7 cities in Q2 2021, the affordable segment (priced Rs 40 lakh) contributed a mere 20% share (approx. 7,230 units).

Anuj Puri, Chairman – ANAROCK Property Consultants says, “The main Southern cities of Hyderabad, Bengaluru, and Chennai together accounted for at least 72% of the total new premium supply in the second quarter. Prominent realty hotspots NCR and MMR had the highest share of affordable housing supply at 52% of a total of 7,230 units launched in this category.”

The new launch trends in both the pre and post COVID-19 periods across the top 7 cities indicate that the new affordable supply share has been reducing post the pandemic.

  • In 2018, out of approx. 1.95 lakh units launched in the top 7 cities, affordable housing had the highest share at 40%, followed by 36% in the INR 40-80 lakh budget category and 16% in the premium segment.
  • Likewise, of the total 2.37 lakh units launched in 2019, the affordable segment accounted for a 40% share, followed by the mid-segment with a 33% share and the premium category with a 16% share.
  • However, in 2020, of the total 1.28 lakh units launched in the top 7 cities, the affordable segment’s share reduced to 30%. The mid-segment had the highest share in 2020 at 40%, while the premium category saw its share increase to 21%. The dramatic drop in affordable housing’s new launch share was profound from Q2 2020 onwards – the period since the pandemic.
  • In H1 2021, affordable housing’s share of new launches dropped further to approx. 26% of 98,380 units launched between January and June. The mid-segment had the highest share at 39% while the premium housing segment had a 25% share. Further quarterly trend analysis reveals that in Q1 2021, the affordable housing supply share was at 30% while in Q2 2021 it dropped to just 20%.   
Source: Anarock Research

Factors Impacting Affordable Housing Supply

Notwithstanding the incumbent government’s continued focus on affordable housing, private players have changed their strategy on the back of the new pandemic realities. Various factors could be responsible for the drop in affordable housing’s supply share drop:

  • Abundant new affordable supply was launched in the top 7 cities after the government began incentivizing this segment post-2014 to back the ‘Housing for all by 2022’ scheme. Demand for affordable housing remains high, but there is now a pileup of unsold stock across cities. As per ANAROCK data, of a total of 6.54 lakh unsold units in the top 7 cities as of Q2 2021-end, the affordable segment has the highest share at 33%.
  • The target audience of the affordable segment (many employed in MSMEs) has been severely impacted by the pandemic in contrast to premium and luxury category buyers. Many affordable housing buyers have had to defer purchase decisions.
  • Affordable housing developers’ profit margins are wafer-thin. Amid rising inflationary trends of basic input costs (cement, steel, labour, etc.), it has become difficult for them to launch budget homes since increasing prices in this highly cost-sensitive segment are inadvisable at this time. Also, overall sales volumes have declined in the last year because of the pandemic.
  • Home loan eligibility for many affordable housing buyers has been impacted by the pandemic due to the loss of jobs and many MSMEs being shut down – resulting in significantly lower sales in this category.

Also Read: Rohit Sharma Sells Villa for Less than He Bought it for

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