Amazon, e-commerce rivals fuel commercial property boom in India


  • TECH
  • Monday, 26 Jan 2015

ONLINE SHOPPING PUSHES UP RENT: Office rents in India's tech hub Bengaluru could rise by as much as a fifth in the next six to nine months as e-commerce companies add to demand.

NEW DELHI: Internet retailer Amazon and its fast-growing local rivals are driving a boom in commercial property leasing in India as their storage needs rise, with shoppers in the country going online to buy everything from televisions to groceries.

Demand from e-commerce firms, a tiny fraction of India's retail industry, accounted for as much as 40% of 1.7 million sq ft (0.5 million sq km) of warehouses leased in 2014 - a seven-fold increase from 2013, according to consultants CBRE South Asia. Warehouse rents have risen by a quarter over the past year.

Other estimates indicate office rents in India's tech hub Bengaluru could rise by as much as a fifth in the next six to nine months as e-commerce companies add to demand.

The result, say developers and analysts, is a speedier than expected recovery for India's commercial property sector, badly dented by two successive years of sub-5% economic growth.

"The best has yet to come for the sector and that will have a snowball effect on the property sector with increased appetite for office space, logistics and warehouse," said Sigrid Zialcita, managing director, research for Asia Pacific at consultant Cushman & Wakefield.

In October, online retailer Flipkart, one of India's largest market place sites, agreed to lease 3.25 million square feet (0.99 sq km) of office space in Bengaluru from developer Embassy Group, making it one of the biggest commercial property leasing deals ever.

"There will be large requirements from these kinds of companies," said Jitendra Virwani, chairman and managing director of Embassy, adding such deals were few, but growing.

While e-commerce companies comprised less than 5% of the 30 million sq ft (9 million sq m) of offices leased in 2014, they are expected to drive demand over the next three to six years.

Uptake of total warehouse space is likely to more than double to 4 million sq ft (1.2 million sq m) in 2015, as more Indians shop online.

Revenues of e-commerce companies in Asia's third-largest economy are expected to rise to US$1.5 (RM5.4bil) to US$2tril (RM7.2tril) over the next 10 years, says Cushman. India already has the world's third-largest population of Internet users.

Among those looking for space is Amazon, which needs a million square feet of offices in Bengaluru, according to property consultants. Amazon had no immediate comment.

Indian classifieds portal Quikr said it is looking for 50,000 square ft (15,200 sq m). Furniture retailer Pepperfry said it plans to grow its shed space to 3 million square ft (910,000 sq m) by 2017 from 250,000 sq ft (76sq km), while rival FabFurnish said it would more than double its space to 800,000 sq ft (243,000 sq m) by mid-2016.

Cushman's Zialcita said that while technology and outsourcing companies will make up the lion's share of demand for now, e-commerce firms will contribute notably in future.

"This is still in its nascent stage... it has the potential to grow," she said. — Reuters

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