The Delhi-NCR market has 98,290 unsold housing units at the end of 2022 calendar year and it will take around five years for builders to sell these stocks at current sales velocity, according to PropTiger.com.
In its latest report, housing brokerage firm PropTiger has mentioned that unsold inventory rose 17 per cent in 2022 to 8,49,510 units across eight major cities.
Out of these, nearly 8.5 lakh unsold stocks, 80 per cent units are under construction, while 20 per cent homes are completed and ready-to-move-in.
These cities are—Delhi-NCR, Mumbai Metropolitan Region (MMR), Kolkata, Chennai, Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Pune and Ahmedabad.
With improvement in housing sales across 8 cities, the inventory overhang -- the estimated time builders would take to sell off the existing unsold stock based on the current sales velocity -- has declined to 33 months in 2022, as compared to 42 months during 2021, the consultant said.
"Pune, Kolkata and Chennai have the lowest inventory overhang of 26 months, whereas, Delhi NCR continues to have the highest inventory overhang of 61 months," PropTiger said.
The Delhi-NCR market has been facing this issue of unsold inventories for many years as sales velocity has remained subdued.
The NCR market is plagued with the problem of stalled projects as many big developers including Unitech, Amrapali, Jaypee Infratech, The 3C Company and Ajnara Group.
Many companies have become bankrupt and facing insolvency proceedings, while many builders are under liquidity stress.
Prospective homebuyers have become cautious and are opting to buy properties from only credible players.
As per PropTiger data, the unsold inventory in Ahmedabad rose 8 per cent to 68,450 units in 2022 compared with the previous year.
In Bengaluru, the unsold stock went up 18 per cent to 78,500 units.
The unsold inventory in Hyderabad surged 72 per cent to 1,13,060 units during 2022.
In two major property markets of Maharashtra, the unsold stocks in Mumbai rose 22 per cent to 3,04,770 units in 2022, while unsold inventory in Pune increased 11 per cent to 1,32,330 units.