Reserve Bank may tighten its grip on the  country's real estate sector further in its forthcoming mid-term review of the  monetary policy on October 30, Ernst and Young has said.
 "With real estate prices continuing to  appreciate, we foresee that the (RBI's) policy baton may tighten in near future  as well," E&Y said in a study on the country's real estate  sector.
 This will leave real estate developers with  little option but to resort to more expensive financing options, it  said.
 Already concerned about the growing exposure of  sceduled commercial banks (SCBs), the apex bank has clamped down on foreign debt  into the real estate sector, hiking risk weight for home loans and increasing  provisioning requirements of banks.
 These measures had some dampening impact on the  housing demand, though overall absorbtion remained healthy. These also helped to  keep specualtors away from the market, it said.
 Exposure of the SCBs to real estate sector grew  by alomst 80 per cent in 2006 over the previous year, E&Y said, adding that  the sector constitutes 91 per cent of their lendings to sensitive  sectors.
 "With limited bank credit and restriction on  infusion of foreign debt into the sector, going forward, financing real estate  projects may become more challenging especially for developers with limited  development experience and management background," E&Y said.
 This will lead to more pressure on the profit  margin of the real estate developers, who are already bearing the brunt of  rising input and overhead costs.
 "The cost for key input material such as steel  and cement has been growing in the last couple of years. It is estimated that  the cost of cement has increased by 30 per cent and that of steel by 10 per  cent, translating into a 15-20 per cent hike in overall cost of construction,"  E&Y said.
 The impact of such a rise has not been witnessed  extensively as the same has been set off by rapidly rising capital values for  real estate, it added.
 E&Y also believes that with increasing global  integration, the Indian real estate sector is no more isolated from possible  tremors in the global economy.
 It exposes the sector to global risks, including  rising global oil prices and the downturn in the US economy.
 In such cases, any such adverse movement could be  a dampener to real estate sector's growth momentum.
 RBI will certainly consider these risks while  drafting the mid-term policy to "cool off" the country's real estate sector, it  said.
 
 



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