Piramal partners Ivanhoé Cambridge for residential development
News Point: Ivanhoé Cambridge to allocate an initial US$250m. PEL…
News Point: Ivanhoé Cambridge to allocate an initial US$250m. PEL…
Bottom Line: Ahead of the deadline of 1st May 2017,…
News Point: In an unprecedented move, Outlook for Social Change…
News Point: Supply/demand mismatch in terms of price and configurations…
News Point: Global hospitality major enters Indian market for serviced…
News Point: Three-way alliance between #Puravankara, Snapdeal and JLL to…
Unique blend of online-offline services provides win-win proposition to buyers…
Anshuman Magazine, CMD of CBRE South Asia writes how tax…
The year 2015 should have been the year of realization that the days of creating ghost cities with inventory for investors is over. The greedy investor is no more interested in blocking his money with a business where the returns in any of India’s major housing market is not more than six per cent today.
The concerns about soaring rentals and unaffordable housing in Mumbai notwithstanding, the surprising fact is that residential property prices across Mumbai city and its suburbs increased only by 7% in 2014, and by a negligible 0.3% in 2013.