Let’s take the hypothetical situation of a developer’s residential project in Mumbai in the last stages of completion. The original date of completion was December 2020 as per RERA. Construction was initially funded by debt from a non-banking financial company (NBFC), and 60% of the sanctioned amount has already been disbursed. Now, the NBFC is rocked by severe liquidity pressures and cannot fund the project to completion.
Sales have been lacklustre because of buyers’ increasing preference for ready-to-move or almost completed projects. By the same coin, sales will pick up once the project nears completion. Many existing buyers have bought units with construction-linked payment plans. Because the project is stalled, they’re not making any further payments. The developer’s ability to service debt has depleted, and the project is now categorised as a non-performing asset (NPA).
This is the story of most of the stalled projects in the country, though projected completion timelines will differ. These projects need a new source of last-mile funding to complete the project. If they get it, the developer will be ready to pay a premium to be able to complete the project with incremental capital, and the NBFC can recover its dues and ease its own balance sheet. Buyers will get their flats, and more buyers will line up to buy completed units.
A win-win situation – and, concisely, what Special Situation Funds (SSFs) do.
A quick recap
Since 2012, NBFCs emerged as the largest lenders for real estate projects in an environment where project delays became commonplace. Until then, banks were primary lenders to the sector – but with project delays jeopardising cash flows, they allowed NBFCs to refinance their books and provide incremental capital for project completions. NBFCs had a golden run until 2018 September, when the IL&FS crisis and the resultant flux in the financial world caused a severe liquidity crunch.
Naturally, banks and other capital providers shied away from funding NBFCs and housing finance companies (HFCs), who no longer have easy access to capital. A large part of their borrowing was short term, wherein loan repayment is a priority. NBFCs/ HFCs no longer had money to lend, even as banks became even more risk-averse. NBFCs became very selective about releasing already-sanctioned loans, which impacted the cash flows of highly-leveraged developers. Projects became heavily delayed or came to a complete halt.
Aiming to bridge the gap in such special situations, many funds got interested even as new funds were created. Such funds are quite specific about their requirements – they will provide the funding for 12 – 36 months with the condition that most of their capital goes towards project completion. Existing lenders may get partial repayment but must take residual charge – the excess funds from the project must first service the new incoming lender – also known as last in first out (LIFO) – and only the residual amount can be used to service the original lender’s loans.
Key criteria of SSFs
- A project should be in an advanced stage of construction (50 – 70% of total cost)
- Meaningful sales should have taken place till date (30 – 60%)
- Enough cash flow to support debt servicing of SSFs
- Existing lender’s NOC to allow senior charge on project cashflows
- Return expectations – IRR in high teens to early twenties
- Tenure: 12–36 months
A gamechanger for the right projects
There is more than enough capital available for specific projects. The largest real estate-focused SSF in the country is the SWAMIH fund – a sovereign fund created to infuse liquidity and solve the cashflow issues of delayed or stalled affordable and mid-income projects. Along with the INR 25,000 Cr SWAMIH, there are various other foreign funds with money having visibility of more than 35,000 Cr.
A large piece of this pie – approximately 60% – is from US-based funds, followed by 31% from Asia (excluding India), 6% from India and 3% from Europe-based funds.
Rescue at hand for qualifying developers
More than adequate funding is available for projects that fit the criteria. While all these funds have the same focus – delayed or stalled projects – there are two significant differences –
- SWAMIH is a sovereign fund and hence available at a lower cost. Other funds are mostly foreign capital and are therefore more expensive.
- Most of the foreign funds allow the existing lender to take out a portion of the outstanding dues; SWAMIH fund does not.
These funds constitute a significant relief for cash-starved residential real estate developers – and all other related industry stakeholders, including aggrieved homebuyers. Dealing with these funds also improves the level of corporate governance of developers, which helps in raising new capital in the future.
Their due diligence is at least as high as the rescue potential they offer. However, developers who are adequately represented to qualify for such funding now have a clear way out of the woods.
This article is contributed by Vishal Srivastava, President – Corporate Finance, ANAROCK Capital.
(The views expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent or reflect the views of RoofandFloor)
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