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BEIJING, Dec. 15 -- Young banker Yan Lei toured the
tree-lined gardens, sculptures and fountains of Baoland East Garden, a new
Shanghai apartment complex, but he did not buy, deciding instead to hold out for
lower prices.
"Home prices in Shanghai have begun to fall, so why
hurry to buy now?" said 30-year-old Yan.
He was not willing to spend the 1.96 million yuan
(US$242,550) the developer was asking for a 140-square-metre unit. Yan thought
less than two-thirds of that would be enough. "The environment is ideal; the
prices aren't," he added.
China's most expensive property market has been
deflating since June, when new taxes aimed at speculators halted a six-year boom
during which prices almost tripled. The slide may deepen as developers increase
supply and demand wanes in a city where a typical new apartment costs more than
50 times the average annual income.
"Property prices in Shanghai have risen out of the
reach of ordinary citizens," said Qiu Zhicheng, an analyst at Xiangcai
Securities Co, who forecast prices will drop 10 per cent in the coming year. "It
was only a matter of time until prices fell."
Real estate has helped Shanghai's economy expand by
12 per cent annually since 1990. The city of 17 million people has built more
skyscrapers in those 15 years than there are in New York. China's central bank
described the city's second-hand and luxury home markets as "bubbles" in a
report issued in August.
Home prices dropped by 7.9 per cent between June and
October, according to the city government's Shanghai Home Index, which has not
reported a more recent figure. The index more than doubled between December 1999
and May.
"Selling
spree"
The steepest declines since then have come at new
apartment projects, as developers such as China Vanke Co, Shanghai Shimao Co and
Shanghai Industrial Development Co try to raise cash to meet year-end bills and
finance new developments.
"Developers need to pay construction contractors at
the year-end and balance their books," said Chen Sheng, vice-director of the
Shanghai Real Estate Index Office. "That's triggered a selling spree."
The amount of new apartment space on sale in Shanghai
jumped to 9.66 million square metres as of Tuesday almost three times the 3.59
million square metres on the market at the end of 2004, according to city
government figures. Home sales this year reached 26.8 million square metres by
mid December about two-thirds of the 34.9 million square metres sold in 2004.
"We had to cut prices in order to sell the remaining
stock," said Qian Zheng, sales manager at the development, which is asking an
average of 9,300 yuan (US$1,148) per square metre, down from 13,000 yuan
(US$1,605) at the peak earlier this year. "We need the cash for the development
of another project."
Shimao Riviera Garden, a high-end project in the
city's Lujiazui financial district, reduced asking prices to 26,000 yuan
(US$3,210) per square metre from a peak of 36,000 yuan (US$4,400) in March.
Vanke, the nation's biggest publicly traded developer, cut prices for its
developments in Shanghai by as much as 20 per cent in September to spur sales,
according to board secretary Xiao Li.
Slowing demand has prompted some developers to offer
perks such as free plane tickets and air conditioners, while others are
guaranteeing refunds in the event of further price declines a tactic used by
Hong Kong developers after 1997, when the city's real estate prices slumped by
60 per cent.
Bags of
cash
It's a turnaround from the pre-June boom, when
would-be buyers sometimes had to wait in line for days to register for popular
developments, and local newspapers were peppered with stories about rich
entrepreneurs from Wenzhou and other cities arriving with bags of cash to invest
in real estate.
"I brought a chair with me and sat all night," said
Ding Ou, 30, who bought a home in the city centre in 2002. "The market was
crazy, and it got much crazier afterwards."
Darkened windows became a common feature of the
night-time cityscape, as developers and speculators stockpiled vacant apartments
in anticipation of further price increases. Prices jumped 19 per cent in the
first quarter of 2005 from a year earlier, prompting central bank Governor Zhou
Xiaochuan to say Shanghai's home prices were worthy of "concern and attention."
The central bank in March raised the minimum interest
rate lenders must charge on home loans and encouraged them to demand bigger down
payments. After those measures failed to dampen price gains, the central
government ordered local authorities to apply a 5.5 per cent tax on the sales
price starting in June.
The State Council said in March that rising property
prices are threatening financial and social stability in China, in a six-page
circular that ordered local governments to take steps to curb "excessive"
growth.
In Shanghai, a 100-square-metre new apartment costs
an average of 914,000 yuan (US$112,800), according to the Shanghai Real Estate
Exchange. That's 55 times last year's average disposable income of 16,683 yuan
(US$2,059). The comparable ratio for the UK is 5.5, according to HBOS Plc, the
nation's biggest mortgage lender. Enditem
(Source: China Daily) |