Sunday, August 12, 2007

FIIs take a fancy to Indian real estate stocks

The booming real estate market has caught the fancy of foreign investors as they have raised their stake in a majority of realty firms listed on the bourses although some analysts believe these stocks are among the most expensive in the world.

An analysis of holding pattern of Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs) in 22 major realty firms shows a majority of them raised stake in the April-June quarter as compared to the previous three-month period.

The FIIs increased their stake in 15 firms, including Unitech, Ansal Housing, D S Kulkarni and Indiabulls Real Estate. However, they decreased their holding in seven firms -- DLF, Atlanta, Era Construction, Lok Housing, Mahindra Gesco, Madhucon Projects and Unity Infrastructure.

Real estate sector in India has witnessed a boom in recent times led by an increase in purchasing power of people, relaxed lending norms by banks and housing finance companies and the growth in retail and IT sectors.

The share buying by FIIs in these companies comes at a time when a few analysts believe the country's realty stocks are among the costliest in the world.

Global investment services firm Standard & Poor's has said real estate stocks in India are the most expensive and give lower returns than most emerging and developed markets such as China, Singapore, Hong Kong and Australia.

A comparison of price to earnings (P/E) ratio of stocks from various countries showed that valuation of property stocks from the US and UK moved lower, while those from emerging markets such as India continued to grow.

The P/E ratio is considered as valuation benchmark of a stock, where a higher ratio indicates an expensive stock while lower P/E ratio signifies a cheaper stock.