Key Points

Small-cap real estate firms in India have delivered stellar 17% returns in the past year, crushing the Sensex’s modest 1.4% growth. The warehousing sector has expanded rapidly, with stock doubling since 2019 due to e-commerce demand and infrastructure upgrades. REITs continue to dominate fundraising, accounting for 43% of capital inflows since FY18. Government policies like GST and Gati Shakti are accelerating growth, especially in Tier 2-3 cities.

Key Points: Small-Cap Real Estate Firms Outperform Sensex With 17% Returns

  • Small-cap real estate firms yield 17% returns vs Sensex’s 1.4%
  • REITs dominate 43% of sector fundraising since FY18
  • Warehousing stock doubles to 438M sq ft in 5 years
  • Tier 2-3 cities drive 18% of demand with e-commerce growth
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Small-cap real estate firms outperform in India, give 17 pc return in 12 months

Indian small-cap real estate stocks surge 17% in a year, outpacing REITs and Sensex, fueled by warehousing boom and policy reforms.

"The total warehousing stock across top eight Tier 1 cities has more than doubled since 2019 – Equirus Securities"

New Delhi, July 29

India's small-cap real estate companies have returned 17 per cent in the past 12 months, and Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) account for almost 43 per cent of fund raising via primary sources since FY18, a report said on Tuesday.

"The total warehousing stock across top eight Tier 1 cities has more than doubled since 2019 from around 213 million square feet to 438 million square feet in 2024," Equirus Securities, a financial service firm, said in its report.

Small-cap real estate companies have been the best-performing segment in the past 12 months, garnering 17 per cent returns, followed by REITs at 15.2 per cent, midcap at 2.5 per cent, the report highlighted.

As per the report, in contrast to small-cap real estate companies, the equity benchmark index Sensex posted a meagre 1.4 per cent, whereas the large-cap real estate listed companies posted a negative -2.9 per cent returns.

Small-cap listed real estate companies continue to be the best-performing segment since March 2021, followed by Mid Cap, large cap, benchmark Sensex and lastly the REITs, which posted the lowest returns, the report noted.

Since FY18, a total of Rs 723,310 million was raised in the real estate sector, out of which REITs accounted for over 43 per cent, around Rs 312,413 million.

India’s warehousing sector has been expanding horizons with 'Emerging Opportunities' beyond the metros, as per the report.

The growth in the warehousing stock is fueled by infrastructure upgrades, policy reforms, and a consumption surge in Tier 2 and 3 cities.

The total stock reached around 533 million square feet in the year 2024 (CY 2024), from around 300 million square feet in CY 2019, the report said.

Government schemes like GST and Gati Shakti are boosting warehousing expansion and connectivity.

According to the report, the growth is largely driven by e-commerce demand (nearly 60 per cent) coming from smaller cities, and warehousing demand is rapidly expanding beyond Tier 1 hubs.

Tier 2–3 cities contribute around 95 million square feet (18 per cent) of the total stock — a four times increase since 2017.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
While the returns look attractive, we must remember small-caps are volatile. My uncle lost money in 2018 crash. Do proper research before investing, don't just chase high numbers!
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Arjun K
Gati Shakti and GST reforms are game changers! Government is finally making logistics business easier. Our family textile business in Surat has benefited massively from new warehouses nearby.
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Sarah B
Interesting data! As an NRI looking to invest in India, I wonder - are these small-cap RE companies transparent enough? Need more regulation to protect foreign investors.
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Vikram M
E-commerce boom is driving this growth. My Flipkart orders from Jaipur now reach in 1 day instead of 5! More warehouses = faster deliveries = happy customers. Win-win for everyone.
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Nisha Z
The report misses one crucial point - environmental impact. All these warehouses need land. Are we sacrificing agricultural land for logistics parks? Need balanced development.

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