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Showing posts from February, 2026

How Landmark Capital Advisors Sees Real Estate Returns Changing in 2026

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  Indian real estate enters 2026 with one of the strongest macroeconomic backdrops globally. Now the fourth-largest economy in the world, with nominal GDP estimated at approximately USD 4.5 trillion, India continues to remain the fastest-growing major economy among large nations. This macro strength is translating into sustained occupier demand, steady institutional capital inflows, and improved income visibility across commercial and residential asset classes. Recent analysis reflected in Landmark Capital Advisors News indicates that 2026 may not be defined by aggressive capital appreciation, but by a structural evolution in how real estate returns are generated and sustained. Rather than asking how fast prices will rise, investors are increasingly asking how durable income streams will be. Capital Is Becoming More Disciplined Institutional investments into Indian real estate touched USD 8.5 billion in 2025, reflecting a nearly 29% year-on-year increase. Annual inflows between US...

Landmark Capital Advisors: Why Capital Recycling Is Redefining Real Estate Fund Discipline in India

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  For much of the last decade, closed-ended funds in India operated on a predictable model raise capital, deploy into assets, exit at maturity, and distribute returns. That linear structure worked in an environment where liquidity cycles were simpler and LP expectations were largely patient. However, as private markets deepen and institutional capital expands, this model is evolving. Increasingly, insights reflected in Landmark Capital Advisors News suggest that capital efficiency is becoming just as important as asset selection itself. In today’s investment landscape, institutional allocators are no longer evaluating returns in isolation. They are closely examining how efficiently capital is deployed, how quickly it is recycled, and whether governance frameworks protect alignment across the fund lifecycle. The Structural Rise of Capital Recycling Capital recycling allows realized proceeds from early exits or refinancing events to be redeployed within the investment period, without...

Landmark Capital Advisors: Insights on India’s Structured Real Estate

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  India’s Real Estate market is steadily moving toward a more structured and disciplined phase. The focus today is no longer limited to short-term market movements but has expanded to include governance, execution quality, and long-term asset sustainability. In this evolving environment, Landmark Capital Advisors news often reflects how institutional thinking is shaping participation in Indian Real Estate. Rather than treating Real Estate as a speculative opportunity, the emphasis has shifted toward understanding assets in depth how they are planned, managed, and aligned with long-term economic demand. This shift is increasingly visible in how platforms like Landmark Capital Advisors are discussed within industry circles. A Shift Toward Structured Real Estate Platforms One of the most notable changes in Indian Real Estate is the growing preference for structured platforms over fragmented execution models. Regulatory clarity, improved compliance standards, and the participation of ...

Landmark Capital Advisors: Tiger Global Ruling and What It Means for Indian Real Estate Capital

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  In January 2024, the Supreme Court of India delivered its landmark ruling in the Tiger Global case a judgment that materially reshapes how tax treaty benefits and capital gains exemptions will be evaluated for cross-border investments into India. The ruling shifts decisive weight toward economic substance, commercial rationale, and actual control and management. Treaty protection can no longer rely primarily on legal structuring or jurisdictional positioning. Instead, courts will examine whether the structure reflects genuine commercial intent. Recent Landmark Capital Advisors news commentary has highlighted how this decision marks a structural shift for offshore capital participating in Indian real estate. A Structural Reset for Cross-Border Real Estate Investment Indian real estate has attracted more than USD 65 billion in cumulative FDI since 2000, representing roughly 10–12% of total foreign inflows. A significant portion of these investments has historically been routed thro...