Special Report:
Boao Forum for Asia
2008
BOAO, Hainan, April 12 (Xinhua) -- Economists and
executives participating here in the Boao Forum for Asia on Saturday highlighted
the uncertainties of China's real estate industry, which they said might
experience a rational cooling at best or a painful reshuffle this year.
Many agreed 2008 would not be a quiet year for
China's property industry, even though the U.S. subprime crisis would hardly
deal serious blows to the domestic real estate market.
Government data had projected a slowdown in the rise
of property prices since January, with price declines registered in some cities.
In Shenzhen of the southern Guangdong Province, the
cradle of the country's real estate industry, developers who used to buy up land
over the past few years had suddenly turned prudent this spring. This was
evidenced by the increasing plots of land failing to be auctioned off.
Pan Shiyi, chairman of property developer SOHO China,
attributed the caution to a strained cash flow in the Real Estate Dialogue talk
on the sidelines of the Boao Forum for Asia 2008 Annual Conference.
Rising interest rates and succinct bank loans under
the tight monetary policy imposed late last year, together with the rising costs
for raw materials, labor and land, had squeezed the profits of the real estate
industry, he said.
China's four largest listed land developers,
including Vanke, China Merchants Property Development, Gemdale and Poly, all
reported a five-year low in cash flow from operating costs per share in their
2007 financial reports.
"Money has become the top problem plaguing the
capital-intensive real estate industry this year," Pan said.
But Ren Zhiqiang, president of the Beijing-based
Huayuan Group, told the meeting he would rather take a long-term perspective.
"Solong as the fundamentals of the Chinese economy remain un-disrupted, property
prices will rise soon or later," he said.
Chen Huai, dean of the policy research office of the
ministry of housing and urban-rural construction, also denied the country's real
estate sector was in the trough.
"The process of urbanization in China is a long-term
strategy that will last 20 to 30 years. It will not easily be affected by
individual events such as the U.S. subprime crisis and the Olympic Games."
The adjustment would be more like a rational cooling
from the past sizzling growth, he noted.
Chen said the newly-installed ministry of housing and
urban-rural construction would strive to secure the need for low-rent houses in
counties and cities, build more houses in villages and townships and further
regulate the property market.
Though confident with the whole industry, Ren still
foresaw a difficult period as cash-strained small players would face mergers and
acquisitions in the months to come.
Hu Zuliu, Goldman Sachs Group (Asia) Ltd general
manager, warned it was dangerous to think China was immune to the subprime
crisis triggered by a property bust in the United states.
He said there were many lessons to be drawn from both
the crisis and history as many countries, such as Australia, New Zealand, Spain,
France, Thailand and Malaysia, had experienced a boom-and-bust real estate cycle
over the past decade. "China should stay on high alert at this point."
