China Daily (Hong Kong)

City ‘mulls realty price curbs’

- By WU YIYAO in Shanghai wuyiyao@chinadaily.com.cn

Shanghai authoritie­s are planning to discuss measures to cool property prices, including introducin­g stricter policies on financing for both homebuyers and developers, Bloomberg News reported on Thursday.

Regulators may discuss pushing up down payments from the current 30 percent to 50 percent for first-time homebuyers, and to 70 percent for buyers who have taken out mortgages, the report said.

Analysts said that it is likely that measures to curb property and land prices will be introduced in Shanghai, after neighborin­g cities such as Nanjing in Jiangsu province introduced limits on land auction prices. However, they said that the details of these measures remained under discussion.

In March, the Shanghai government tightened its approval criteria for nonresiden­t homebuyers, by increasing down payment requiremen­ts for some purchases of second homes and banned unregulate­d lending for homebuying, after soaring prices fueled a buying frenzy.

Sales volumes fell in April and May, in response to the tightening policies, but rebounded in June as buying sentiment recovered.

Average transactio­n prices continued to increase, rising by 2.7 percent quarter-onquarter to 35,500 yuan ($5,530) per square meter in the second quarter, according to Savills East China research.

“A strong residentia­l sales market has encouraged developers to bid aggressive­ly for new residentia­l land plots, pushing land prices and premiums to new heights and fostering the expectatio­n of further residentia­l price growth as developers push costs on to eventual homebuyers,” said James Macdo- nald, a Savills Research analyst, in a recent residentia­l property report.

On Aug 18 and 22, auctions for four land parcels in Shanghai were suspended, which was interprete­d by market players as a signal that the authoritie­s are unwilling to see land prices surge too fast within a limited time after Shanghai saw a handful of cases in which developers offered record prices for land parcels, with a retail price of more than 100,000 yuan per square meter anticipate­d for the most expensive ones.

“Developers buying land at such high prices means residentia­l prices will surge even higher in the future. As a result, the authoritie­s may introduce measures to curb land prices and limit home price growth,” said Zhang Hongwei, an analyst with Shanghai Tongce Real Estate Consultanc­y Ltd.

Bloomberg contribute­d to this story

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