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BEIJING, April 25 -- More than half of Beijing homes sold last year in
the higher price bracket were bought by people from outside the capital.
That figure includes purchases by overseas buyers, who bought 13 per cent
of more expensive homes, the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences said in its
annual real estate report yesterday.
The report, entitled the "Blue Book of Real Estate," showed that about 52
per cent of apartments and villas, sold for an average of 11,467 yuan (US$1,416)
per square metre or more, were purchased by people from outside the capital.
The average price per square metre for homes in Beijing is 6,725 yuan
(US$830).
"With its special status as the nation's capital, Beijing has increasingly
become home to people from other provinces and municipalities, as well as from
abroad," the report said.
Only 38.4 per cent of expensive houses sold in the capital last year went
to Beijing residents.
The remaining homes, 9.5 per cent of the total, were bought by companies
and institutions, the report said, although the total number of top-end
residences sold was not revealed.
However, the report did reveal that the total amount of residential space
sold last year in all price brackets amounted to 40.79 million square metres.
In contrast to the luxury end of the market, local residents bought nearly
60 per cent of the 154,000 average-priced homes sold last year.
Overseas buyers bought just 2.2 per cent of the relatively low-priced
houses, the report said.
The report also said that last year nearly one-quarter of houses approved
for sale were priced at above 8,000 yuan (US$986) per square metre, an increase
of 4.2 percentage points year-on-year.
A survey conducted by the Beijing Urban Construction Research Centre late
last year found that only 9.3 per cent of local people could afford houses
priced between 7,000 yuan (US$863) and 10,000 yuan (US$1,233) per square metre,
the report said.
And only 1.5 per cent said they could buy houses worth more than 10,000
yuan (US$1,233) per square metre.
The report predicted prices in the Chinese capital would continue to
increase this year, following a rise of nearly 20 per cent year-on-year in 2005.
But prices will not rise too steeply because there is ample supply, the
report said.
Yang Shen, former president of the China Real Estate Association, yesterday
said he believed house prices would rise for some time to come, as land is in
short supply.
(Source: China Daily) |