China Daily

New-home prices poised to soar over next few decades

- By ZHAO YANRONG zhaoyanron­g @chinadaily.com.cn

The price of a new home in China will nearly quintuple in three decades despite sharp drops in transactio­n volumes, according to a recent report released by China Internatio­nal Capital Corporatio­n Ltd.

By 2050, the average price of new houses in China will break 30,000 yuan ($4,500) per square meter, and prices in cities such as Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenzhen will rise up to 70,298 yuan, although the average price in 2015 was only 6,472 yuan and 21,505 yuan, respective­ly, the report said.

The transactio­n volume will witness significan­t changes, the report said. The trade volume nationwide will cut by nearly half from 1.12 billion sq m in 2015 to 671 million sq m in 2050. In firsttier cities, the volume will reach a peak of 58.7 million sq m in 2025, and then shrink to 40.6 million in 2050.

The figures were calculated based on the economic fundmental­s of the property market in China, said Zhang Yu, an analyst at CICC.

According to Zhang, the price and transactio­n volume, in the short term, might be affected by elements such as money supply, government policies, urbanizati­on and the developmen­t of infrastruc­ture. However, in the long term, macroecono­mics and population are the two decisive factors in

Zhang Yu, an analyst at CICC

the property market.

“When the per capita GDP is at a lower level, housing is not people’s basic requiremen­ts. But when GDP grows to a certain level when their requiremen­ts for housing can be generally satisfied, the transactio­n volume would go down,” Zhang added.

Compared with secondhand property, which is a much more competitiv­e market, the price of new houses is often determined by the prices of land, which is strongly influenced by government decisions, the analyst said.

In nationwide property purchases, 20 percent are secondhand houses and 80 percent are new ones. So far, transactio­ns of secondhand houses have only surpassed new ones in 10 cities, including four first-tier cities and six leading second-tier cities, Zhang added.

“In the future, when the new and secondhand house buying ratio reaches six to four, the real estate industry in China will be more market-driven and much closer to the economic laws and our calculated figures,” he said.

For homebuyers who have rigid demand, any shortterm housing value depreciati­on will only be a “paper loss”, said the analyst, because in the long term, the property prices in China will definitely increase due to the inevitable inflation.

“House purchasing is consumersp­ending in nature, but most homebuyers in China more or less consider it as an investment. For the property buyers, who can afford the price and with a lower leverage, today’s price is the best value to purchase,” he added.

For the property buyers, who can afford the price and with a lower leverage, today’s price is the best value to purchase.”

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