The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Real estate booms in China’s small cities

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BENGBU, China: Luxury lakeside homes and high-rise condominiu­ms are coming up fast in China’s sleepy inland town of Bengbu, a clear sign that a homebuying frenzy sweeping across the country’s major metropolis­es and provincial capitals has reached even its smaller cities.

The increase in demand is welcome news for smaller cities that have a massive overhang of unsold houses left from the last real estate downturn three years ago. However, the surge in constructi­on threatens to outpace or match the increased demand for housing, leaving housing inventorie­s untouched.

That will be a worry for China’s policymake­rs, who want to keep the real estate market stable ahead of a once-every-five-years Communist Party congress in the autumn that will see a reshuffle of senior leaders.

The property market in Bengbu, once a fishing village on the banks of the Huai River and Lake Longzi, has been among the top three fastest-growing in China’s 70 main cities in recent months although the local economy is soft - the region’s main glass-making industry has been hit by the general growth slowdown.

Property analysts say property demand in such smaller cities has surged because local government­s offer cheap credit and impose next to no restrictio­ns, unlike in the bigger cities, where defenses are in place to fend off speculatio­n and prevent formation of property bubbles.

We think the market will continue to be good even though we don’t expect a drastic rise in prices anymore. Huang, Bengbu Jinhui Real Estate manager

Real estate in tier-three and tierfour cities, ranked below the major metropolis­es and the provincial capitals, is where the growth is now, analysts say, but the frenzied constructi­on means the stock of unsold homes has remained stubbornly high.

Nearly 50 million square meters of real estate, or about 550,000 homes, were sold in 27 tier-three cities in January-May this year, which should have reduced inventorie­s by 45 per cent, according to Reuters calculatio­ns based on a private estimate of inventorie­s in China’s main small cities.

In reality, inventorie­s only dropped 7.1 per cent to 102 million square metres (sqm), equivalent to 1.1 million homes, data by Shanghai-based E-house China R&D Institute (E-house) showed, because of new constructi­on.

Prices for new homes in Bengbu surged 3.4 per cent on-month in May, the highest among all 70 major cities, data from the Statistics Bureau showed. Bengbu ranked second-highest in April and thirdhighe­st in June.

“We think the market will continue to be good even though we don’t expect a drastic rise in prices anymore,” said a manager surnamed Huang at Bengbu Jinhui Real Estate, a private developer that has actively bought land rights in Bengbu.

A unit of Kingyard Real Estate, the firm successful­ly bid 1.39 billion yuan (US$205.4 million) for a nearly 12,000 sqm (three acres) parcel of land in Bengbu in May, more than double the starting price, where it plans to build residentia­l housing.

In Bengbu, housing inventorie­s hit a high of 4.84 million sqm in January 2016, which at the time would have taken more than 40 months to clear.

But despite sales jumping allion most 70 per cent to about 1.47 million sqm in the first half, the excess stock only decreased about four per cent to 4.39 mil- sqm as of May, E-house’s latest estimates showed, due to new supplies entering the market.

Developers obtained pre-sale permits to sell 1.12 million sqm of new projects in the first half, with permits in June up more than 400 per cent from a year earlier, according to Reuters calculatio­ns based on Bengbu housing bureau data.

The propaganda office of the Bengbu government declined to comment, and phone calls to the city’s housing bureau went unanswered.

There are already signs demand is slowing in Bengbu.

Property prices have jumped almost 50 per cent since the start of the year for some new units to around 7,500 yuan (US$1,108) per sqm, according to local agents.

While that is about one-tenth of prices in big cities like Beijing and Shanghai, the price is high for a city like Bengbu. — Reuters

 ??  ?? A constructi­on site of residentia­l buildings is seen in Bengbu, Anhui province, China. Luxury lakeside homes and high-rise condominiu­ms are coming up fast in China’s sleepy inland town of Bengbu, a clear sign that a home-buying frenzy sweeping across the country’s major metropolis­es and provincial capitals has reached even its smaller cities. — Reuters photo
A constructi­on site of residentia­l buildings is seen in Bengbu, Anhui province, China. Luxury lakeside homes and high-rise condominiu­ms are coming up fast in China’s sleepy inland town of Bengbu, a clear sign that a home-buying frenzy sweeping across the country’s major metropolis­es and provincial capitals has reached even its smaller cities. — Reuters photo

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