The growing number of insolvencies highlight Indian property developers' inability to complete apartments and meet their debt obligations amid the funding crisis.
The
number of Indian
real estate companies tipped into insolvency has doubled in less
than a year since the collapse of a key shadow bank, an event often
compared to the Lehman crisis that squeezed American funding markets
a decade ago.
As
many as 421 developers entered bankruptcy court by the end of June,
up from 209 in September 2018, around the time when the government
seized control of Infrastructure
Leasing & Financial Services Ltd.
The
move triggered a credit crunch for smaller financiers and property
firms, which depend on funds from shadow lenders.
The
numbers will probably increase, according to Vivek K. Chandy, joint
managing partner at law firm J. Sagar Associates.
Of
the 421 cases, 164 have been closed, he said, which means they were
resolved, withdrawn, or the companies faced liquidation.
The
growing number of insolvencies highlight Indian property developers’
inability to complete apartments and meet their debt obligations amid
the funding crisis. The crunch is feeding into -- and worsened by --
an economic slowdown that is hitting Indians’ demand for goods and
services.
Business Standard
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