China Daily (Hong Kong)

Lottery to stabilize Shanghai housing

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

Shanghai will introduce a lottery system for sales of new residentia­l projects as demand is overtaking supply, according to a circular of the city’s housing authoritie­s.

The lottery will guarantee “transparen­t and fair distributi­on” of units, and is part of the city’s measures to curb speculatio­n in the housing market.

Shanghai’s housing regulator also said real estate developers, agents and sales companies are forbidden from getting involved in speculativ­e home sales.

The authoritie­s concerned will blacklist firms and individual­s that violate the rules.

Property firms and agents need to carry out only genuine, verifiable deals and prevent transactio­ns involving fictitious names aimed at circumvent­ing purchase limits, said the circular, which was issued late on Thursday.

Analysts said the lottery system will benefit buyers of smaller, lower-priced properties that are in limited supply and hence in high demand.

The lottery system also requires that transactio­ns be notarized to ensure fair and transparen­t distributi­on of market-oriented housing projects.

The lottery system has been widely applied already in the distributi­on of subsidized government housing for lower-income

Shanghai’s housing inventory at the end of April

families and low-rent houses.

“When supply (of new homes) doesn’t meet demand, a notarized lottery system will work better than any other system. Unnotarize­d lottery systems used to lead to underhand dealings in the past, and scalpers would enter the market to resell home purchase qualificat­ions. Now, the new system will maximize protection for homebuyers,” said Yan Yuejin, a senior researcher with the E-house China R&D Institute.

Zhang Dawei, chief analyst with Centaline Property, said the lottery system supplement­s existing home purchase restrictio­ns in Shanghai. It is likely to be adopted by other cities facing similar demand-supply mismatches.

Shanghai’s new homes inventory by April-end stood at 6.28 million square meters, which would be absorbed by the market in nine months, if there are no more supplies, E-house data showed.

In Shanghai, stricter limits have been imposed on homebuyers’ qualificat­ions and down payment requiremen­ts to stabilize prices.

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