Moreover, no guarantee is obligatory when the money is coming from the buyer unlike the case in banks,
where it is a pre-requisite to secure a loan. Also, no bank funds a project completely. They sanction loans
equivalent to 60-70% of the total project cost. However, retail buyers are giving upfront down-payment
seeing mouth-watering returns without creating a fuss about security.
The Payment Module
Even the payment module of an ARS is pro-developer. Assured Return projects are primarily commercial
projects where people put their money usually for the sake of investment. They invest in bulks and expect
as much returns as possible. But for developers, such schemes are a way of generating quick and hassle-
free money. Therefore, it has been seen that the payment module of the schemes are made in such a way
that approximately 80-90% of the payment is acquired while the building is still at the budding stage.
The aesthetics of profit
Developers manage to acquire large profits even after giving good returns to the buyers. While planning
an assured return scheme, developers don’t usually sell every unit in one go itself. Walking on the
footsteps of ‘Break and Make’, they sell their product in stages. For example, if a builder is having 40
shops in a building, he will divide them in four stages and will keep a varied per square feet rate for every
stage in order to maximise his profits.
Reading Between The Lines
‘Less is spoken, more is hidden.’ In an assured return project too, the contract is made with a number of
clauses that stay hidden from the eye of an ordinary buyer till he gets the heat of one of them. Buyer in the
awe of the sample property and heavy returns, doesn’t read the agreement carefully and falls into the
honey trap of the developer. “Generally, the developer floats an entirely new venture vehicle everytime he
brings out a project thereby making that floated firm responsible for the project and not the whole group,”
comments Harsh Roongta while discussing the irregularities of an Assured Return Scheme.
The Web of Black money
Black money and real estate share age-old relation. While the industry doesn’t want to accept it, the truth
is, it is running into the veins of the industry. According to a survey by consultancy firm KPMG, 32% of
respondents voted real estate as the most corrupt sector in India. Here the black money can be found at
every stage. Starting from acquiring land to getting the necessary approvals, bribe is stipulated at every
step. Builder, in turn, gather the unaccounted capital from the buyers who in the greed of saving tax
money, pay him illegally through cash or either support him in downplaying the whole transaction.
Escrow Account- a mandatory preposition
One of the biggest reasons for delay in real estate projects is the shortage of funds. While the buyer pays
regular installments to the banks, the real estate firms use the funds for various other purposes like
servicing their earlier debts, paying taxes or interest or even start new projects rather than concentrating
on the prior one, due to which the buyer suffers in the end.
A builder too is vulnerable
Bringing out such schemes is also essential for the developer. “A developer needs money to fund his new
projects and to keep the older ones running as well. Presently, his means of finances are at all-time low
and he is already under huge debt pile. At such times, he brings out an Assured Return project to generate
cash at low interest rates,” Mr. Ahuja said.
Don’t enter in a bad deal
“A buyer before investing in an assured return scheme must understand that this is a high risk product, it
completely depends upon market and can get stalled at any point of time. There are numerous risks
involved which a buyer should keep in mind. First, he should stay prepared that a market may fall causing
a sharp overnightly drop in prices or rise in construction cost. Secondly, the developer may step back and
halt the construction work citing lack of funds which can cause delay in possession and fall in prices.
Thirdly, the property may not be able to yield expected returns due to various miscellaneous reasons such
as unfeasible location, improper maintenance etc.
What if a buyer struck in a bad deal?