Institutional investment in real estate increased 37 per cent to USD 1.65 billion during January-March, driven by higher inflow in office and housing properties, according to Colliers.
Inflows stood at USD 1.2 billion in the same period last year, it added.
Foreign investors preferred to deploy funds in office assets, while domestic players put more money into housing.
The office sector continued to drive the investment inflows, accounting for 55 per cent of the total inflows during the January-March period, the data from real estate consultant Colliers India showed.
The residential segment's share was 22 per cent.
Institutional investment inflows in the office sector rose 41 per cent to USD 907.6 million during January-March from USD 643.6 million in the corresponding period of the previous year.
Inflows in residential assets jumped to USD 361.1 million from USD 16.5 million.
Industrial and Warehousing assets saw a 20 per cent growth in inflows to USD 216.3 million from USD 179.9 million.
Investments in alternate assets rose sharply to USD 158.2 million from USD 39.8 million.
Alternate assets include data centres, life sciences, senior housing, holiday homes, and student housing.
Retail real estate assets did not receive any investment in the January-March quarter against USD 257 million in the year-ago period.
Inflows in mixed-use projects fell 80 per cent to USD 15.1 million from USD 77.3 million.
Colliers noted that global investors remained inclined towards office and industrial assets, and dominated the total investment inflows at 76 per cent share.
Larger markets, such as Delhi-NCR and Bengaluru, attracted one-third of the total investments during the quarter.
However, the majority of the inflows (63 per cent) were through multi-city deals.
"In the coming quarters, we shall see some large quality assets traded in office and select logistics assets," said Piyush Gupta, Managing Director, Capital Markets & Investment Services, at Colliers India.
Global institutional investors' appetite for office assets remains strong owing to India's growing talent pool, digitisation, enhanced transparency in deal structures and stable returns, said Vimal Nadar, Senior Director & Head of Research, Colliers India.
Foreign investments accounted for about 93 per cent of the total investments in office assets during Q1 2023, he said.
The institutional ?ow of funds includes investments by family o?ces, foreign corporate groups, foreign banks, proprietary books, pension funds, private equity, real estate fund-cum-developers, foreign-funded NBFCs and sovereign wealth funds.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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