This explains why real estate stocks tumbled sharply when IT major Tata Consultancy Services announced layoffs earlier this year. “Bengaluru-exposed realty names have lately traded like a high-beta add-on to IT risk,” said Harshal Dasani, Business Head at INVasset PMS.
AI impact on real estate stocks
Bengaluru is often called the “Silicon Valley of India” due to the high concentration of technology companies in the city. As a result, housing and commercial real estate demand has historically remained strong to cater to this large workforce. However, the AI disruption narrative that has dominated much of 2026 so far has weighed on several South India–based real estate companies.
Brigade Enterprises, which is headquartered in Bengaluru and has operations across other southern cities, has seen the steepest decline among the Nifty Realty constituents, with its shares falling more than 20% so far in 2026.
Prestige Estates Projects and Sobha Limited, both also based in Bengaluru, have seen their shares decline by more than 11% and 1%, respectively, so far this year.While Bengaluru enjoys the reputation of being India’s tech capital, other markets such as Gurugram and Mumbai have also emerged as key hubs for IT offices. As a result, other constituents of the Nifty Realty index have also come under pressure. Shares of Signatureglobal (India) have fallen 16% so far in 2026, while heavyweights DLF and Godrej Properties have declined by up to 12%. The Phoenix Mills and Oberoi Realty have slipped about 9%, while Macrotech Developers (Lodha) and Anant Raj Limited are down 6% and 3%, respectively, so far this year.
AI acts as near-term overhang for real-estate, say experts
Concerns around the IT sector and a potential slowdown in job creation triggered a knee-jerk market reaction in the real estate sector, said Vinod Nair, Head of Research at Geojit Investments. “While any real impact on housing demand would unfold gradually, it could act as a near-term overhang,” he added.
Harshal Dasani of INVasset PMS said that as fresh AI disruption worries weighed on technology stocks in recent sessions, developers with a heavy presence in India’s tech capital slipped in tandem. He noted that this reflects the Street’s instinctive link between IT hiring sentiment and property demand.
“The logic is straightforward: Bengaluru’s residential absorption and a large chunk of its Grade A office leasing are closely tied to global capability centres and IT services firms. If AI-led efficiency gains translate into slower hiring or delayed expansion, the spillover into housing upgrades and commercial leasing could be meaningful, at least in perception, if not immediately in data,” Dasani said.
Nair, however, noted that the recent correction has largely stemmed from delays in pending project launches, primarily due to administrative bottlenecks that are unlikely to persist. This has weighed on the sector despite a strong project pipeline and healthy demand, particularly in the mid and premium segments, according to the analyst.
Is there a silver lining to the AI threat?
Despite the worries, the recent correction has made valuations appear more reasonable, according to Vinod Nair of Geojit Investments.
Harshal Dasani of INVasset PMS, meanwhile, said that the operating numbers tell a more nuanced story. “India’s office market closed 2025 with record leasing of over 80 million sq ft, with Bengaluru among the top contributors. Residential sales across the top seven cities have also remained resilient over the past year, even as prices firmed up and interest rates stayed elevated. For investors, that creates a tactical dilemma. Quality developers with strong balance sheets and execution track records may warrant staggered accumulation on declines, especially with pre-sales visibility intact,” he added.
Safe to catch falling knives?
According to Vinod Nair, investors may consider waiting for greater clarity on IT sector trends before initiating fresh exposure to real estate stocks.
Dasani also said that waiting for clearer signs of consolidation before taking aggressive exposure may prove the more prudent strategy, given that IT volatility could persist in the near term.
The Nifty Realty Index is currently displaying a weak technical structure, warranting a cautious “avoid” stance in the near term, said Drumil Vithlani, Technical Analyst at Bonanza.
Technical view on Nifty Realty
“Price action remains below the 20-, 50-, 100- and 200-day EMAs, highlighting a persistent bearish trend across timeframes. Recent attempts to rebound have lacked follow-through, with the index struggling to sustain levels above the 820–840 resistance zone,” Vithlani said.
“Although there has been a minor bounce from the 760–780 support area, momentum indicators remain subdued. The RSI is hovering around the 40–50 band, indicating neutral-to-weak momentum rather than a decisive reversal. Volume patterns also do not yet reflect strong accumulation,” the analyst added.
Given the prevailing downtrend and the absence of higher highs and higher lows, it is prudent to wait for further consolidation and a confirmed breakout above key moving averages before considering fresh long exposure, Vithlani added.
(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)