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Mumbai real estate draws USD 1.19 bn in institutional inflows, led by US and Japan

#Top Stories#India#Maharashtra#Mumbai City
Last Updated : 17th Nov, 2025
Synopsis

Mumbai's real estate market attracted USD 1.19 billion in institutional investments over the past nine months, according to Cushman & Wakefield's India Capital Markets Q3 2025 report. This marks a sharp rise from USD 295.57 million a year earlier. Foreign investors contributed 67% of the total, led by USD 500 million from the US and USD 297 million from Japan, while domestic investors added USD 398 million. The firm noted that Mumbai has now crossed the USD 1 billion mark for four consecutive years, supported by strong fundamentals and major projects like the Trans Harbour Link and Coastal Road. In contrast, nationwide institutional inflows declined 10% during the period.

Mumbai's real estate sector saw institutional investments rise significantly during the past nine months, touching USD 1.19 billion, as highlighted by Cushman & Wakefield. The firm's India Capital Markets Q3 2025 report stated that investments in the January-September period grew to USD 1,195.78 million, compared with USD 295.57 million recorded during the same period a year earlier.


The consultant mentioned that foreign investors contributed 67 per cent of the total inflow, amounting to USD 797.7 million. This was led primarily by investors from the US at USD 500 million, followed by Japanese investors at USD 297 million. Domestic players accounted for the remaining USD 398 million.

Somy Thomas, Executive Managing Director of Capital Markets at Cushman & Wakefield, remarked that institutional investments in Mumbai had exceeded the USD 1 billion threshold for the fourth consecutive year. He noted that this trend reflected the market's strong fundamentals, infrastructure enhancements, and a varied asset base that continued to encourage participation from both overseas and local investors. Thomas also indicated that connectivity-enhancing projects such as the Trans Harbour Link and the Coastal Road had reinforced investor faith in Mumbai's long-term prospects, and he suggested that the pace of investment could pick up further in the coming months.

However, the report pointed out that institutional fund inflows across India overall declined by 10 per cent during the same nine-month period, amounting to USD 4,694.54 million compared with USD 5,236.20 million in the previous year. Cushman & Wakefield estimated that total institutional investments in Indian real estate might reach USD 6-6.5 billion by the end of this calendar year, lower than the USD 7.1 billion recorded in 2024.

Source - PTI

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