India’s real estate market may look bulletproof right now, but history says otherwise. Real estate advisor Rajdeep Chauhan warns that property prices do not rise forever, and past crashes in Japan, China, and the US prove what happens when fundamentals slip.

“Your uncle bought a flat in 2007,” Chauhan writes in a LinkedIn post. “He’s still waiting to break even.” Advertisement

That one line sets the tone for a larger argument: property values rise only when economic conditions support them. Chauhan dismantles the popular belief that real estate is a guaranteed win, pointing instead to brutal corrections from around the world.

“In 1989, Japan’s real estate market was so hot that the land under the Imperial Palace in Tokyo was worth more than all of California,” he notes. “Then it crashe

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