When the World Shakes, Build Anyway
ECONOMY & POLICY

When the World Shakes, Build Anyway

"The mantra is simple, and it has never changed: keep the construction going — for the day the market turns, only what is built can be sold."

There is a particular kind of quiet that descends on a sales office when the world outside is anything but quiet. The phones ring less. Walk-ins slow. Prospective buyers sit on their hands, waiting to see which way the wind blows. Right now, that wind is blowing hard — from West Asia, from geopolitical fault lines cracking open between major powers, from commodity markets rattled by the possibility of conflict. And when the wind blows hard enough, money — cautious, self-preserving money — tends to disappear from circulation.

India is not an island. As a nation that imports nearly 80 per cent of its crude oil requirements, it is directly exposed to global price shocks. Rising fuel costs feed into household budgets, construction input prices, and investor sentiment — sometimes all at once. The ripple effects of escalating tensions abroad are not hypothetical. They are already washing ashore.

Yet India's real estate sector enters this period of uncertainty from a position of unusual strength. Institutional capital flows into Indian real estate surged to a record $8.5 billion in 2025 — a 29 per cent year-on-year rise, one of the strongest growth rates in the entire Asia-Pacific region. Office leasing crossed historic thresholds. NRI investment is on course to represent 18 to 20 per cent of total inflows by 2026. The structural story — urbanisation, rising incomes, infrastructure investment — remains intact and compelling. 

But structural stories are cold comfort if your construction site runs dry next quarter. The challenge facing developers today is not philosophical. It is operational, financial, and urgent.

A World That Withholds
Geopolitical tension has a well-documented effect on discretionary spending. When fear enters the room, people hold onto money. They delay large purchases. They reassess. For real estate — one of the largest single financial commitments most families will ever make — this caution can manifest almost overnight. A buyer who was ready to sign last month may suddenly prefer to wait three more months, or six, or indefinitely.

History offers instructive parallels. Global financial crises have previously led to decreased demand, stalled projects, and severe capital constraints for developers across India. The mechanism is always the same: consumer confidence softens, sales slow, collections fall, construction stalls, and projects that were viable become distressed. What begins as hesitation in the market becomes a liquidity crisis on the balance sheet.

At the same time, geopolitical tension tends to lift construction costs. Material supply chains — particularly for steel, cement, and energy-dependent inputs — become unpredictable when shipping routes are contested and oil prices spike. Margins compress from both ends: revenue slows as costs rise. It is precisely the combination that tests which developers are truly resilient.

The silver lining, if one exists, is that India's fundamentals are robust enough to absorb a period of volatility without structural damage — provided that developers take the right precautions now, before the slowdown deepens.
$8.5B Record institutional capital into India's real estate in 2025
29% Year-on-year investment growth — highest in Asia-Pacific
80% Of India's crude oil requirements are imported — a key vulnerability

A Field Guide for Developers: 5 Rules for Building Through Uncertainty 
When the market turns cautious, the developer who survives is not the one with the most optimism — it is the one who planned for the worst.

01: Model your cash flow as if sales have stopped
This is not pessimism — it is discipline. Every developer should stress-test their cash flow position against a scenario of zero new sales. What costs are fixed? What obligations cannot be deferred? How many months of runway exists without a single new booking? This exercise, uncomfortable as it is, is the single most clarifying thing a developer can do right now. The answers determine everything that follows.

02: Secure a line of credit before you need one
Construction must continue. This is non-negotiable — not merely because it is a legal obligation, but because a stalled site is the single most damaging signal a developer can send to the market. If financial closure is not in place, or if the project is wholly dependent on sales collections to fund construction, the time to act is now. Approach financial institutions. Arrange a line of credit. Establish the buffer. The collections that are coming in from existing sales must be protected for construction, not diverted to other uses.

03: Welcome patient capital, even at a discount
HNIs and NRIs are watching the market carefully. In a slowdown, they see opportunity. A developer who would ordinarily resist selling inventory below sticker price should reconsider that instinct. A unit sold at a 10% concession to a motivated investor today is money in the bank — money that keeps construction moving, that demonstrates project momentum, and that maintains credibility with all buyers. Protecting price points at the cost of liquidity is a dangerous trade-off. Cash in the bank, above all, ensures the project survives.

04: Watch walk-ins and lost prospects with clinical attention
The data is in the footfall. When walk-ins begin to fall, it is the first signal that sentiment is shifting. More telling still: track where lost prospects go. Did they buy elsewhere — from a competitor, in a different location, at a different price point? Or have they simply exited the market entirely? The first scenario is competitive pressure, manageable with positioning and value. The second is a genuine demand contraction — a much more serious condition requiring a different response. Developers who monitor this distinction closely will be able to respond to reality rather than assumption.

05: Lean into credibility — it is your most durable asset
In uncertain times, buyers do not abandon real estate; they become more selective about whom they trust. Projects in strong locations, backed by quality construction and credible developers, consistently hold their ground — and often emerge from slowdowns with enhanced reputations. Every site visit that showcases genuine progress, every communication that is transparent about timelines, and every commitment that is kept builds the kind of goodwill that outlasts any geopolitical cycle. Credibility, once earned, compounds.

"Without construction, even the sales you have will stop. Keep building — because it is the only proof that you will deliver."

By Srini Gopalan, CEO, Arisinfra Solutions

The mantra is simple, and it has never changed: keep the construction going — for the day the market turns, only what is built can be sold.There is a particular kind of quiet that descends on a sales office when the world outside is anything but quiet. The phones ring less. Walk-ins slow. Prospective buyers sit on their hands, waiting to see which way the wind blows. Right now, that wind is blowing hard — from West Asia, from geopolitical fault lines cracking open between major powers, from commodity markets rattled by the possibility of conflict. And when the wind blows hard enough, money — cautious, self-preserving money — tends to disappear from circulation.India is not an island. As a nation that imports nearly 80 per cent of its crude oil requirements, it is directly exposed to global price shocks. Rising fuel costs feed into household budgets, construction input prices, and investor sentiment — sometimes all at once. The ripple effects of escalating tensions abroad are not hypothetical. They are already washing ashore.Yet India's real estate sector enters this period of uncertainty from a position of unusual strength. Institutional capital flows into Indian real estate surged to a record $8.5 billion in 2025 — a 29 per cent year-on-year rise, one of the strongest growth rates in the entire Asia-Pacific region. Office leasing crossed historic thresholds. NRI investment is on course to represent 18 to 20 per cent of total inflows by 2026. The structural story — urbanisation, rising incomes, infrastructure investment — remains intact and compelling. But structural stories are cold comfort if your construction site runs dry next quarter. The challenge facing developers today is not philosophical. It is operational, financial, and urgent.A World That WithholdsGeopolitical tension has a well-documented effect on discretionary spending. When fear enters the room, people hold onto money. They delay large purchases. They reassess. For real estate — one of the largest single financial commitments most families will ever make — this caution can manifest almost overnight. A buyer who was ready to sign last month may suddenly prefer to wait three more months, or six, or indefinitely.History offers instructive parallels. Global financial crises have previously led to decreased demand, stalled projects, and severe capital constraints for developers across India. The mechanism is always the same: consumer confidence softens, sales slow, collections fall, construction stalls, and projects that were viable become distressed. What begins as hesitation in the market becomes a liquidity crisis on the balance sheet.At the same time, geopolitical tension tends to lift construction costs. Material supply chains — particularly for steel, cement, and energy-dependent inputs — become unpredictable when shipping routes are contested and oil prices spike. Margins compress from both ends: revenue slows as costs rise. It is precisely the combination that tests which developers are truly resilient.The silver lining, if one exists, is that India's fundamentals are robust enough to absorb a period of volatility without structural damage — provided that developers take the right precautions now, before the slowdown deepens.• $8.5B Record institutional capital into India's real estate in 2025• 29% Year-on-year investment growth — highest in Asia-Pacific• 80% Of India's crude oil requirements are imported — a key vulnerabilityA Field Guide for Developers: 5 Rules for Building Through Uncertainty When the market turns cautious, the developer who survives is not the one with the most optimism — it is the one who planned for the worst.01: Model your cash flow as if sales have stoppedThis is not pessimism — it is discipline. Every developer should stress-test their cash flow position against a scenario of zero new sales. What costs are fixed? What obligations cannot be deferred? How many months of runway exists without a single new booking? This exercise, uncomfortable as it is, is the single most clarifying thing a developer can do right now. The answers determine everything that follows.02: Secure a line of credit before you need oneConstruction must continue. This is non-negotiable — not merely because it is a legal obligation, but because a stalled site is the single most damaging signal a developer can send to the market. If financial closure is not in place, or if the project is wholly dependent on sales collections to fund construction, the time to act is now. Approach financial institutions. Arrange a line of credit. Establish the buffer. The collections that are coming in from existing sales must be protected for construction, not diverted to other uses.03: Welcome patient capital, even at a discountHNIs and NRIs are watching the market carefully. In a slowdown, they see opportunity. A developer who would ordinarily resist selling inventory below sticker price should reconsider that instinct. A unit sold at a 10% concession to a motivated investor today is money in the bank — money that keeps construction moving, that demonstrates project momentum, and that maintains credibility with all buyers. Protecting price points at the cost of liquidity is a dangerous trade-off. Cash in the bank, above all, ensures the project survives.04: Watch walk-ins and lost prospects with clinical attentionThe data is in the footfall. When walk-ins begin to fall, it is the first signal that sentiment is shifting. More telling still: track where lost prospects go. Did they buy elsewhere — from a competitor, in a different location, at a different price point? Or have they simply exited the market entirely? The first scenario is competitive pressure, manageable with positioning and value. The second is a genuine demand contraction — a much more serious condition requiring a different response. Developers who monitor this distinction closely will be able to respond to reality rather than assumption.05: Lean into credibility — it is your most durable assetIn uncertain times, buyers do not abandon real estate; they become more selective about whom they trust. Projects in strong locations, backed by quality construction and credible developers, consistently hold their ground — and often emerge from slowdowns with enhanced reputations. Every site visit that showcases genuine progress, every communication that is transparent about timelines, and every commitment that is kept builds the kind of goodwill that outlasts any geopolitical cycle. Credibility, once earned, compounds.Without construction, even the sales you have will stop. Keep building — because it is the only proof that you will deliver.By Srini Gopalan, CEO, Arisinfra Solutions

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