BEIJING, July 24 (Xinhua) -- China issued on Monday
new proposals to regulate foreign investment in its real estate sector.
The proposals include an increase in the ratio of registered capital in property developers' overall investment and restrictions on residential property purchases by foreign
institutions and individuals.
They are part of the government's efforts to regulate
China's real estate market and to improve the efficiency of foreign investment.
The proposals have been jointly issued by the
Ministry of Construction, the Ministry of Commerce, the National Development and
Reform Commission, the People's Bank of China, the State Administration of
Industry and Commerce and the State Administration of Foreign Exchange.
The proposals also provide details on revised
regulations regarding building projects, share structures, loans and foreign
exchange sales of foreign-invested real estate enterprises.
According to the proposals, foreign institutions
establishing branches or representative offices in China and individuals working
or studying in China for more than one year can purchase apartments for their
own use.
The proposals also require local governments to
monitor foreign investment entering China's real estate market.
There is some speculation going on in China's real
estate market, said Andy Xie, an economist with Morgan Stanley in Hong Kong.
He says a combination of low interest rates and
expectations of further appreciation of the renminbi have caused torrents of
overseas money to flow into China's real estate sector.
The new proposals will regulate foreign financial
investors by raising the thresholds for foreign investors establishing
enterprises or foreign institutions purchasing residential properties, said Xie.
Wang Xiaoguang, professor with the Macroeconomics
Division of the NDRC's Institute of Economic Research, said the "more than one
year" stipulation for individual buyers will remove small speculators from
overseas.
China has taken a series of measures this year to
control the real estate market in response to concerns about excessive foreign
investment in this sector, which has absorbed the most foreign investment in
China.
Newly established foreign-invested real estate
enterprises increased by 25.4 percent in the first half of this year, compared
with the same period last year. The amount of foreign capital actually used was
up 27.9 percent.
Foreign exchange sales of foreign institutions and
individuals for purchasing commercial housing have more than tripled in the
first quarter.
Yin Bocheng, a professor with the Fudan University,
said it is a common international practice to try to eliminate real estate
speculation by restricting foreign investment flowing to the sector. He stated
that China has not raised the threshold for foreign investment in the real
estate market since 2002.
As fears spread that China's economy is overheated,
controls on the real estate sector are seen as a way to cool it, said Xie. The
economy here grew by 10.9 percent in the first half of the year compared to the
same period last year. Enditem