China Daily (Hong Kong)

Commercial-titled apartment sales hit

- By WU YIYAO in Shanghai wuyiyao@chinadaily.com.cn See page 18

In Beijing’s Chaoyang district, Yue Shulin, 31, a real estate agent, has been “taking a break” for more than two weeks, the longest time he has ever been off work since starting his career in the industry in 2009.

Yue focuses on deals for commercial-titled apartments — residentia­l properties which were offices or shops once upon a time in commercial projects. But, since March 26, when Beijing authoritie­s banned sales of these projects to individual buyers and suspended mortgage for such purchases, Yue has not closed a deal.

“It feels like the time when you are suspended at college and barred from pursuing your major. I had some 26 units on my list by mid-March. Now, broke. I’ve to find new resources, new clients and start from zero,” he said.

In the past five years, commercial-titled apartments dominated the so-called quasiresid­ential market, and accounted for a significan­t part in Beijing’s overall residentia­l segment.

“Before the March 26 ban, commercial-titled apartments use to be an option for people who are not qualified to buy their first home or second home in Beijing. These projects were classified as commercial properties, so they were not subject to home purchase restrictio­ns.

“That meant people with enough money could buy, and down payment requiremen­t was about 50 percent, which is lower than 60 percent required for a second home.

“Commercial-titled apartments became a first choice for people without household registrati­on ( Hukou) and investors who wished to buy more than one home in the city, despite the fact that such properties were subject to higher utility bills. Demand for such properties was growing fast as supplies of convention­al residentia­l properties were limited,” said Gao Liangyi, 43, who lives in a commercial-titled apartment in Beijing’s Xicheng district.

Part of such high demand came from some startup business owners who used such apartments as both office and home. The average price of commercial-titled apartments was

The ban shows ... resolve to curb speculatio­n in real estate.” Zhang Dawei, chief analyst with Centaline Property was invested in commerical properties in the March 1 to 25 period, up 508 percent year-on-year

much more affordable than that of offices in commercial establishm­ents or convention­al apartments, said Gao.

According to a report by Beijing housing authoritie­s, transactio­ns for commercial-titled apartments surpassed that for convention­al residentia­l properties in March.

There were 7,312 new commercial-titled apartments in the market last month, up 530 percent year-on-year. And 4,675 of them were bought/sold by March 25, up 402 percent yearon-year.

The average price of such deals was 26,979 yuan ($3,967) per square meter, up 24 percent year-on-year. Overall, 7.77 billion yuan ($1.1 billion) was invested by homebuyers in such properties during the March 1 to 25 period, up 508 percent year-on-year.

Zhang Dawei, chief analyst with Centaline Property, said, “The ban on sales of such properties to individual buyers shows authoritie­s’ determinat­ion to curb speculatio­n in every aspect of the real estate market”.

“For investors who have already bought such properties, their value wouldn’t appreciate as expected. Such properties may have to be used by themselves. For developers of such properties, they need to find a way out of these projects to realize their commercial value.”

Other cities will likely introduce similar measures against speculatio­n in the quasi-residentia­l market. “They, too, may ban sales of commercial-titled apartments to individual­s,” said Zhang.

 ?? MA XUEJING AND SU JINGBO AND YANG LIU / CHINA DAILY ??
MA XUEJING AND SU JINGBO AND YANG LIU / CHINA DAILY

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