Working · Mechanism · Money Flow

How BrickReturn actually works.

The full mechanism — from the first investor rupee to the last monthly rebate — explained without jargon. Read top to bottom, or jump to a section.

1. The Core Idea

Use the transaction itself to fund the transaction.

Every time a developer sells a home in bulk to a wholesale buyer, they discount the price by 15–25%. That discount has always existed — but only large institutions could capture it. Individual homebuyers, the people who actually live in the homes, never see a paisa of it.

BrickReturn™ does one thing: it aggregates buyers into a wholesale block, captures the bulk discount, then routes that discount — plus disciplined market yield on a recycling corpus — back to the homebuyer as a monthly rebate. The buyer's bank EMI stays exactly the same. Their net outflow shrinks every year.

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The arbitrage between wholesale and retail pricing in Indian residential real estate is real, documented, and routine. The innovation isn't creating it — it's redirecting it to the person bearing the EMI.

2. The Money Flow

Follow the rupee.

Every arrow below represents a real cash movement. Nothing is synthetic. Figures trace a single ₹1 crore unit at the default 40% corpus markup — they scale with the property price and the markup setting.

INVESTOR

Corpus Capital

₹1.2 Cr

committed per unit, 12-year term, earns 8.5% p.a. (CAGR) → ₹3.19 Cr lump sum at maturity

BRICKRETURN™

Pools Capital + Aggregates Demand

Holds investor seed. Identifies homebuyer cohorts. Approaches developers as a bulk wholesale buyer.

DEVELOPER

Wholesale Sale

₹80 L per unit

sells at ~20% below retail price for guaranteed bulk offtake — the standard wholesale discount they already give institutional buyers

BRICKRETURN™

Retail Resale at Market Price

₹1.00 Cr per unit

sells to individual homebuyer at full market price. Buyer takes a standard bank home loan. Day-1 arbitrage profit: ₹20 L.

RECYCLING CORPUS

Total Investable Pool

₹1.40 Cr per transaction

= ₹1.20 Cr investor capital + ₹20 L BrickReturn™ Day-1 arbitrage. Invested across index funds, flexi-cap MFs, and sovereign gold bonds.

HOMEBUYER

Monthly Rebate

~25% of the buyer's annual yield paid monthly. Year 1: ₹20,833. Year 12: ₹59,440.

INVESTOR + BR™

Coupon + Margin

Investor's ₹1.2 Cr grows at a fixed 8.5% CAGR to ₹3.19 Cr, paid as a lump sum at maturity. BrickReturn™ retains the surplus.

3. The Four Players

Who puts in what, and who gets what back.

1

The Investor

Provides the bulk of the corpus capital.

PUTS IN the corpus minus BR's arbitrage (₹1.2 Cr for a ₹1 Cr unit at 40% markup) · 12-yr term
GETS BACK 8.5% CAGR → ₹3.19 Cr lump sum at maturity · asset-backed

Why they participate: predictable, debt-like returns secured against real estate inventory and a diversified portfolio — better than fixed deposits, lower volatility than equity.

2

The Developer

Sells inventory in bulk.

GIVES UP ~20% off retail price on each unit
IN EXCHANGE guaranteed bulk offtake · zero marketing cost · upfront cash flow

Why they participate: developers already do this for institutional buyers. BrickReturn™ is just another wholesale channel — but a more reliable one.

4

The Homebuyer

The reason the whole thing exists.

PAYS full market price · standard 9% bank loan over 12 yrs
RECEIVES monthly rebate that grows every year · up to 52% net EMI relief by year 12

Why this matters: for the first time, the wholesale-retail spread on their own home actually benefits them — instead of an institutional buyer flipping the unit.

4. The Six Steps

Walked through, end to end.

Step 1

Corpus Assembly

Institutional investors fund a managed corpus over a 12-year term, earning a contractual 8.5% p.a. (CAGR) paid as a single lump sum at maturity. The corpus is sized at a 20–40% markup over the property's price (an adjustable input), and the investor provides whatever the corpus needs beyond BrickReturn™'s Day-1 arbitrage. For a ₹1 crore unit at the default 40% markup, that's a ₹1.2 crore commitment growing to ₹3.19 Cr. This is debt-style capital — the investor doesn't share upside or downside of the property; they earn a fixed compounded return.

Key point: investor capital is not at-risk against any individual unit. It's deployed against the diversified portfolio in Step 5.
Step 2

Bulk Acquisition

BrickReturn™ approaches a developer with a commitment to purchase ≥20 units in a single project. In exchange for guaranteed bulk offtake and accelerated cash flow, the developer offers a 15–25% discount on retail pricing. A ₹1 crore unit is acquired for ~₹80 lakh.

Why this discount is real: developers pay 6–8% in marketing, brokerage, and carrying cost per retail unit. A bulk sale eliminates almost all of it. The 20% discount is roughly their saved cost plus a cash-flow premium.
Step 3

Retail Sale at Market Price

BrickReturn™ resells each unit to an individual homebuyer at the prevailing retail market price (₹1 crore). The buyer takes a standard home loan from a standard bank at standard rates. Nothing about their borrowing experience changes.

Day-1 outcome: ₹20 lakh of pure arbitrage profit per unit. This is captured by BrickReturn™ and flows into the recycling corpus.
Step 4

Corpus Expansion

Per transaction, the investable corpus is set 20–40% above the property's sale price (a slider on the calculator). For a ₹1 crore unit at the default 40%, that's ₹1.40 crore = ₹1.20 crore of investor capital + ₹20 lakh of BrickReturn™'s Day-1 arbitrage. This is the engine that funds the rebate stream for the entire 12-year buyer tenure.

Scaling effect: every additional unit sold adds another ₹1.40 crore to the corpus. The model compounds.
Step 5

Yield Engine Deployment

The corpus is deployed across a disciplined three-asset allocation, targeting a blended 10–11% annual return:

  • 50%Index Funds (Nifty 50 / Next 50) — historical 11-13% — broad-market equity exposure
  • 30%Flexi-Cap Mutual Funds — historical 9-10% — diversified active equity
  • 20%Sovereign Gold Bonds / ETF — historical 6-9% — inflation hedge, low correlation
Why this mix: equity-heavy enough to generate the yield, diversified enough to survive a single bad year, and gold-backed for tail-risk protection.
Step 6

Rebate Distribution

Approximately 25% of the buyer's annual yield is paid monthly to the homebuyer as a rebate, credited directly to their account. The rest of the yield services the investor's 8.5% return and BrickReturn™'s management margin.

Critical design choice: the rebate amount is performance-linked. If markets underperform in any given year, the rebate proportionally shrinks. BrickReturn™ never subsidises a shortfall from reserves.
5. Why The Math Works

The numbers, sanity-checked.

The cleanest test of any financial model is whether the cash flows balance over the full horizon. Here's the full worked example for a ₹1 crore property over a 12-year tenure, at a 10% blended corpus return — the exact numbers our live calculator produces.

Step A — Assemble the corpus (Day 1)

Property market price₹1.00 Cr
Bulk purchase from developer (−20%)− ₹80 L
Day-1 arbitrage kept by BrickReturn™ → seeded into corpus+ ₹20 L
Investor capital committed+ ₹1.20 Cr
Recycling corpus assembled₹1.40 Cr
The corpus is sized 20–40% above the property's price (slider); here ₹1.40 Cr = price + 40% markup. Investors fund it minus BR's ₹20 L arbitrage → ₹1.20 Cr in this example (it scales with the property and the markup setting). Deployed across index funds, flexi-cap MFs and sovereign gold (≈10% blended return).

Step B — Grow it for 12 years at ~10%

₹1.40 Cr corpus compounding at 10% (if nothing withdrawn)~₹4.39 Cr
Less: buyer rebate stream paid out along the way
(₹53.5 L cumulative ≈ ₹86 L in year-12 future value)
− ₹86 L
Corpus remaining at maturity~₹3.54 Cr

Step C — Split the ₹3.54 Cr at maturity

Investor lump sum  (₹1.20 Cr × 8.5% CAGR × 12 yrs)₹3.19 Cr
BrickReturn™ residual stake  (₹20 L arbitrage → 1.72×)₹34 L
Total paid out₹3.53 Cr ✓ balances
Separately, the homebuyer already received ₹53.5 L in monthly rebates during the 12 years (Y1 ₹20,833/mo → Y12 ₹59,440/mo) — funded entirely from corpus yield, never from reserves or new investor money.

Every rupee is accounted for: the corpus earns ~10%, the investor is paid a locked 8.5%, the homebuyer keeps the rebate, and BrickReturn™ keeps the spread. Because the corpus earns more than the investor's fixed 8.5% — and is larger than the investor's stake (₹1.40 Cr vs ₹1.20 Cr) — the surplus comfortably funds both the buyer's rebate and BR's margin, with headroom left to absorb a weak market year.

6. Risk Architecture & Safeguards

The four design choices that keep this honest.

1. Performance-linked rebates

If portfolio returns drop in a given year, buyer rebates shrink proportionally. Never funded from reserves, new investor money, or future cash flow. The model can't ever owe more than it earned.

2. No Ponzi dynamics

Each transaction is self-contained: one buyer, one bank loan, one investor stake, one corpus contribution. New buyers are not used to pay old buyers. The system doesn't require growth to survive.

3. Asset-backed investor capital

Investor seed is secured against physical inventory (during the holding phase) and a publicly-traded diversified portfolio (during the operating phase). No speculative collateral.

4. Transparent reporting

Buyers and investors receive monthly statements: portfolio NAV, yield earned, rebate disbursed, fees deducted. Every number is auditable. The math is open, not opaque.

7. What If Things Go Wrong

The honest scenarios.

What if the developer discount is only 12% instead of 20%?

Day-1 arbitrage drops from ₹20 L to ₹12 L per unit. The model still works — but the corpus is ₹8 L smaller per unit, so buyer rebates and investor margin both shrink proportionally. The structure is robust; the numbers just scale down. (Use the slider on any property page to test this yourself.)

What if markets crash and the corpus loses 25% in a year?

Buyer rebates that year are paid only from realised yield, not from principal. In a deeply negative year, the rebate may be zero or near-zero. The buyer's bank EMI is unaffected (they pay the bank directly). The corpus recovers in subsequent years; rebates resume.

What if the investor wants to exit before maturity?

The 12-year term is contractual. Secondary-market transfer to another qualified investor is permitted, similar to how senior debt securities trade. BrickReturn™ does not buy back from reserves.

What if the buyer pre-pays or sells the house?

Rebate stream stops on the date the bank loan is closed. The buyer keeps all rebates already received. The unit's corpus contribution continues to service investors and the company.

What if interest rates spike (loan rates rise to 11%)?

The buyer's bank EMI rises — that's between the buyer and their bank, outside BrickReturn™'s scope. But the corpus's debt-component yields also rise, partially offsetting at the portfolio level. The relative relief stays similar in absolute rupees.

What's the regulatory status?

The model is in ideation and academic review stage. Legal viability under RERA, SEBI's AIF regulations, and RBI's NBFC framework has not been formally assessed. Operationalisation would require structuring as a regulated AIF (Alternative Investment Fund) with RERA-compliant inventory holding.

8. End-to-End Example

A worked example, day by day.

Imagine Aanya, a 32-year-old engineer in Bangalore. She wants a ₹1 crore 3-BHK in Sarjapur. Here's what happens:

  1. Day 0

    BrickReturn™ has already bought the unit

    BrickReturn™ committed to a 25-unit block from the developer six months earlier at ₹80 L per unit. The arbitrage profit is already in the corpus.

  2. Day 1

    Aanya signs the sale agreement at ₹1 Cr

    She applies for a home loan at her usual bank. ICICI approves ₹85 L at 9% for 12 years. Her standard EMI: ₹1,13,803/month.

  3. Day 30

    First EMI hits. First rebate hits.

    Bank debits ₹1,13,803 from her account. BrickReturn™ credits ₹20,833 the same day. Net outflow: ₹92,970.

  4. Year 5

    Corpus has compounded. Rebate has grown.

    Monthly rebate is now ₹30,502. Aanya's net EMI: ₹83,301 — 27% lighter than year 1.

  5. Year 12

    Final EMI. Loan closed.

    Final month rebate: ₹59,440. Net outflow: ₹54,363. Aanya has received ₹53.5 L in cumulative rebates over the tenure. She owns the house outright.

Without BrickReturn™

₹1.64 Cr in EMIs (interest + principal) over 12 years for a ₹1 Cr home.

VS

With BrickReturn™

₹1.10 Cr in net outflows after rebates for the same home.

Next

Try the model on a real property.

Browse 99 live and completed projects across India. Each one shows you what you'd pay with a standard loan vs. what you'd pay with BrickReturn™ — adjustable by your own assumptions.