Figure 1: City-level total and vacant office stock (Source – REIS, JLL)
Figure 2: Pan-India vacancy rate and rent growth (Source – REIS, JLL)
Apart from each city’s own strength, the healthy demand forecast is backed by continued occupier interest in the Indian market with positive steps from government towards improving transparency and sustainability in the sector via various real estate and economic policies. In this context, the scarcity of office space has prompted new projects by developers, particularly in cities such as Bengaluru, Pune, Hyderabad and Chennai. In Mumbai, six out of eight sub-markets will likely see a decline in vacancy rates by the end of 2017 although currently they are close to city average at 19%. It’s worth noting that the vacancy rate is often very different between Grade A assets and superior Grade A assets i.e. those that are of higher quality and in prime locations in a city. Our estimates show that the vacancy rate for superior Grade A assets is around 6% at the pan-India level as compared to 15.3% for the overall Grade A basket. Overall, low vacancy levels in many Indian cities and the rising demand for high-quality Grade A space is likely drive up average rents, but at varying degrees for different sub-markets. For instance, sub-markets such as the Secondary Business Districts (SBDs) of Bengaluru and Pune, and Hi-Tech City in Hyderabad are expected to outperform the average, with rent growing 4-6% y-o-y in the medium term (2017-18). Meanwhile CBDs of all cities, suburbs such as MG Road, Gr Noida in the NCR, Salt Lake in Kolkata among others, will see stability or a negligible rent rise of 0-1% in the same forecast period.