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Homes to holdings: The new way wealthy invest in realtyMeanwhile, the AIF ecosystem has quietly grown into a Rs 10 lakh crore industry, according to Sebi data.
Bhavya Bagrecha
Last Updated IST
<div class="paragraphs"><p>Bhavya Bagrecha Fund Manager at Wealth Company Asset Management Private Limited.</p></div>

Bhavya Bagrecha Fund Manager at Wealth Company Asset Management Private Limited.

Bhavya Bagrecha Fund Manager at Wealth Company Asset Management Private Limited

For decades, the surest way to build wealth in India was simple — buy land, hold it long enough, and watch its value grow. For most families, property wasn’t just an asset class; it was identity, legacy, and financial safety rolled into one.

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But a quiet revolution is reshaping how India’s affluent are investing in real estate. The new generation of investors — more global, more data-driven, and less sentimental — are moving away from buying physical property and towards Alternative Investment Funds (AIFs) that let them participate in the same story, but with scale, diversification, and none of the hassles of direct ownership.

The end of the one-apartment mindset

The “own-a-flat” mindset is giving way to a portfolio approach. A 30-year-old professional in Bengaluru or a family office in Mumbai is now asking: Why buy one apartment when I can invest in 10 projects through a regulated fund?

The logic is hard to argue with. Direct property investment, once the gold standard of wealth, now faces diminishing returns. Residential rentals rarely yield more than 2-3% annually. Liquidity is poor, and managing tenants, taxes, and paperwork can feel like a full-time job.

Meanwhile, the AIF ecosystem has quietly grown into a Rs 10 lakh crore industry, according to Sebi data. Within that, real estate-focused Category II AIFs have emerged as the new magnet for high-net-worth capital — offering investors a professionally managed gateway into India’s most-resilient asset class.

What makes AIFs different

At their core, AIFs are professionally managed, privately pooled investment vehicles. They collect capital from sophisticated investors and deploy it into real estate — through either debt or equity — depending on the fund’s mandate.

Debt-oriented AIFs lend to developers at secured interest rates, typically returning 12-16% annually. Equity-oriented AIFs invest in the ownership or quasi-equity of projects, often aiming for 18-25% internal rate of return (IRR). Both come with one key advantage: they allow investors to ride India’s real estate growth without having to own or manage a single square foot.

And unlike buying a single property, these funds diversify across multiple developments — from premium housing and commercial offices to warehousing and data centres — spreading risk, while opening access to institutional-grade opportunities.

Professional capital meets professional management

Behind every credible AIF sits a team of fund managers, analysts, and real estate experts who evaluate deals, manage developer relationships, and monitor execution. The investor, in effect, outsources the heavy lifting — project selection, due diligence, and exit planning — to specialists whose interests are aligned with performance.

This marks a major evolution from the old, relationship-driven world of real-estate investing, where decisions were often based on instinct or personal networks. AIFs bring institutional discipline, transparency, and scale to what was once an opaque, fragmented market.

Why the shift feels
inevitable

Several forces are driving this transition.

Demographic change: A younger, financially-literate generation values liquidity and performance over emotional attachment to assets

Regulatory confidence: Sebi’s AIF regulations (2012) have brought credibility and oversight, boosting investor comfort

Funding gaps: As traditional bank credit to developers remains tight, private capital through AIFs is filling the void — at attractive yields

Evolving real estate themes: Institutional projects — from logistics hubs to student housing — are now accessible to investors through fund structures rather than ownership

Put simply, the AIF is the modern counterpart to the family’s second flat — but smarter, diversified, and data-backed.

The new relationship with real estate

The rise of AIFs doesn’t mean the end of direct property investment. Homes will always remain emotionally resonant — a space to live, not just to invest. But the financial relationship with real estate is changing. Investors now seek returns, governance, and convenience, not just square footage.

In that sense, the shift towards AIFs mirrors India’s broader financial evolution — from saving in gold to buying ETFs, from family business to portfolio allocation. It’s about moving from tangible comfort to strategic confidence.

The road ahead

As India urbanises and infrastructure deepens, the need for capital across the built environment — housing, offices, logistics, data infrastructure — will only grow. AIFs are fast-becoming the preferred bridge between this opportunity and the capital waiting to deploy.

For investors, this is more than a trend; it’s a mindset shift. From owning a home to owning a share of India’s urban future — the AIF revolution is redefining what it means to be a real estate investor in the new economy.

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(Published 08 December 2025, 04:24 IST)