The British government is looking for Indian investment into the country’s real estate sector, beyond London, to support its drive to create more affordable housing across the country, among other things.
According to media, Britain is keen on getting investment from India beyond London as well in sectors like real estate, infrastructure, particularly energy infrastructure.
While foreign investors including from China and Qatar have made big inroads into the U.K. real estate market, the country has seen limited investment (beyond private investments in housing or hotels) from India. The exception is the Lodha group, which has two luxury housing projects in London and has expressed its confidence about moving to new price categories and beyond the residential sector.
At an event at the House of Lords for delegates of the Confederation of Real Estate Developers’ Associations of India (CREDAI), the Department for International Trade highlighted infrastructure and property development opportunities in northern England and the Midlands, including in and around Birmingham.
“Real estate trends across the U.K. continue to be strong from offices in London to logistics in the Midlands to urban regeneration projects in Edinburgh,” Greg Hands, the Minister of State for Trade and Investment said in the meeting. “Investors from across the U.K. are seeing stable and profitable opportunities and we are determined to see businesses seize these opportunities as we move forward towards Brexit.”
With the next round of the U.K.-Indian joint economic and trade committee (JETCO) talks due to take place in London later this year, Mr. Hands expressed confidence in efforts to boost bilateral trade and investment.
“JETCO is a very practical way of reducing obstacles to each other’s markets…we go through a series of specific sectors and the actual obstacles to doing trade and investment between our two countries,” he said.
“We’d like to focus on the services industry and getting access. India is an enormous market and getting U.K. financial services and U.K. legal services better access is hugely important to us,” the minister said.
“These issues will be a key part of those talks as well as the trade working group,” he said referring to the joint working group on trade set up to look at opportunities and obstacles to post-Brexit trade, including the potential for a free trade agreement.
“It’s too early to tell what a future free trade agreement between India and the U.K. could look like so its even more important to focus today on removing and reducing trade barriers between the two countries to ensure that the investment flow continues and the export flow: the U.K. has a lot of capability of great interest to India, around smart city technology: …I remain very optimistic that the commercial relationship between the two countries will flourish and flow in the years to come.”
He said that after the referendum last year Britain had continued to attract large amounts of FDI, including from the U.S. tech giants, Europe, Japan and India. “The picture since the Brexit vote has been very strong and we need to maintain that. The U.K. has a good future: the Brexit talks have only just started and there will be issues and complications along the way but for both sides there is a strong interest to have a strong trade agreement to keep trade flowing,” he said.
He acknowledged that challenges remained in bilateral relations including around India’s concerns about visas and Britain’s around those who overstayed their visas in India. “We recognize there is a great deal of interest around visas…its important to note that two thirds of all work visas issued by the U.K. go to Indian nationals, which presents a really good picture. India is the first country to be added to the registered traveler scheme, which is an important way of quickly getting through immigration barriers…I am confident we have a good system in place but we obviously want to make sure we talk to our counterparts in India to make sure it can be smooth as it possibly can.”