Business
Mumbais Real Estate Market Witnesses Robust 1.11 Lakh Registrations Between Jan-Sep
New Delhi: The Mumbai real estate market continued its upward trajectory this year, recording 1,11,388 property registrations between January to September — up 5.5 per cent from 1,05,607 units in the same period last year, a report said on Tuesday.
According to the latest Inspector General of Registration (IGR) data, 2025 is setting new benchmarks in both property registrations and government revenues, underlining the sector’s resilience and growing significance in India’s economy.
The January-September registration was up 18.1 per cent from 94,307 in 2023.
“When compared with pre-pandemic activity, the scale of growth is even more striking. Registrations in 2025 are more than double the 2019 level (50,045, up 122.6 per cent) and nearly four times the 2020 level (28,822, up 286.6 per cent), when the market was deeply impacted by the COVID-19 outbreak,” Anarock Group said in its latest report, citing IGR data.
Meanwhile, the stamp duty and registration fee collections mirrored this surge in registrations.
In the first nine months of this year, revenues touched a record Rs 10,094.22 crore, surpassing the previous high of Rs 8,876.42 crore in 2024.
This represents a 13.7 per cent increase year-on-year, and a dramatic fivefold rise of 421 per cent compared to 2020 (Rs 1,937.32 crore) during the pandemic slump, the report highlighted.
“This sustained growth is due to a combination of robust housing demand, accelerated infrastructure development, premium project launches, and stable policy frameworks. With 2025 already surpassing the Rs 10,000 crore milestone in just nine months, the year is firmly on track to become the most successful year ever for property registrations and collections,” said Anuj Puri, Chairman, Anarock Group.
The sustained performance points toward a structurally stronger real estate market, driven by both end-users and investors, setting the stage for continued expansion in the years ahead, he added.
The IGR data underscored the real estate sector’s remarkable recovery over the past few years.
In 2019–2020, Registrations and revenues dipped sharply due to the pandemic. In 2021, Market revival began with 86,072 registrations and revenues exceeding Rs 4,252 crore.
The growth continued in 2022 as the revenues crossed the Rs 6,600 crore mark, up 55 per cent from 2021. Further, between 2023–2025, the market not only stabilised but surged, breaking records.
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Oil market price battle: Russia and Iran offer deeper discounts to China as crude piles up at sea – The Times of India
Russian and Iranian oil producers are reportedly offering deeper discounts to compete for the same limited pool of Chinese buyers after India pulled back from purchases. Analysts say India’s imports from Russia could fall by 40 per cent from January levels, to around 600,000 barrels a day, according to a scenario from Rystad Energy, as reported by Bloomberg.Much of the displaced crude is heading east, sparking a price war with Iranian suppliers, long favoured by China’s independent refiners, known as teapots. Russian Urals crude is reportedly selling at about $12 a barrel below ICE Brent, up from a $10 discount last month. Iranian Light crude is going for as much as $11 below the global benchmark, widening from $8–$9 in December, according to traders.
“The Chinese private refiners cannot take in much more as their capacity is likely maxed out,” said Jianan Sun, an analyst at Energy Aspects, noting that sanctioned barrels are building up in both onshore and offshore storage.China’s teapots historically act as a pressure valve, absorbing barrels shunned by others, but their capacity is limited; they account for roughly a quarter of the country’s refining capacity and are also subject to government import quotas. Major state-owned refiners, meanwhile, have traditionally avoided Iranian crude and have recently largely stayed away from Russian barrels as well.With China unable to fully absorb the displaced supply, unsold oil is piling up in Asian waters, leaving Russia and Iran scrambling. The Kremlin has already cut output, depriving it of funds for its war in Ukraine, while Iran is trying to ship as much oil as possible amid fears of a potential US strike.Data shows Russian oil deliveries to Chinese ports rose to 2.09 million barrels a day in the first 18 days of February, a roughly 20 per cent increase from January and nearly 50 per cent higher than December. By contrast, Iranian exports to China have fallen about 12 per cent from a year earlier, to roughly 1.2 million barrels a day, according to Kpler. The firm estimates nearly 48 million barrels of Iranian crude are now at sea, up from about 33 million in early February. Russian cargoes sitting in Asian waters total around 9.5 million barrels.A potential US strike on Iran could disrupt exports if oil facilities are targeted or shipments through the Strait of Hormuz are blocked. Russian barrels carry a “relatively lower level of risk” for Chinese buyers compared with Iranian crude, said Lin Ye, vice president of oil markets at consultancy Rystad Energy, citing optimism over a potential ceasefire in Ukraine.
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