Bangkok Post

Online sales in China booming

- BLOOMBERG EMMA DONG LULU YILUN CHEN

SHANGHAI/HONG KONG: From a threestore­y villa in Chongqing to a rundown factory in Jiangsu province, you can search, find, and buy it without leaving your living room in China.

Online distressed property sales are booming in the world’s largest baddebt market.

Global funds like Oaktree Capital Group LLC and Bain Capital LP are getting in on the action but the internet has meant even individual­s or smaller companies can snag a bargain.

Banks, real estate firms and people saddled with debt they can’t service are facing either forced sales or are keen to offload assets for quick cash.

Distressed property listings on Alibaba Group Holding Ltd’s Taobao auction site, the country’s largest, rose 88% in October from a year earlier as the company expanded its offerings by working with courts and asset managers.

Across all auction sites in China, distressed real estate listings surged to a record 1.3 trillion yuan ($190 billion) this year, data compiled by realtor Seatune show.

“With bad loans rising and property prices falling, be assured this trend will continue,” said James Feng, the chairman of Poseidon Capital Group, a Chinese fund that specialise­s in buying distressed assets.

Alibaba, which started its auction site about six years ago, facilitate­d around 500 billion yuan of such auctions last year, accounting for more than half of China’s total, Feng estimates.

Getting a bargain is one of the main reasons people buy property online. A twobedroom apartment in downtown Shanghai worth about 10 million yuan at current market prices went for a 44% discount on Taobao in September.

In Hangzhou, a city in eastern Zhejiang province, a 60 million yuan unit with marble floors, sweeping staircases and chandelier­s is listed on Taobao for around 40% less than current prices.

Distressed property — be it homes, which individual­s are more interested in, or land or warehouses, which companies like — is typically offered at about two-thirds of its market value.

Heated bidding can see prices pushed up to about 90% of that, according to Zhejiang Province Zheshang Asset Management Co Ltd, although only about 40% of listings actually sell.

Still, the opportunit­ies are expected to keep coming, with bad loans tied to property increasing.

“Real estate underpins China’s $1.4 trillion non-performing loan market, accounting for as much as 80% of debt in portfolios sold,’’ Pricewater­houseCoope­rs LLP said in a report last month.

To bid, prospectiv­e buyers have to deposit funds in advance. Alibaba doesn’t take a commission, and can also facilitate third-party services, such as due diligence from a law firm.

Local courts can also help getting photos of a property, including its address, size and estimated market value.

Buying a home online is of particular interest to individual­s wishing to circumnavi­gate austerity measures in China’s bigger cities that cap the number of properties a person can own.

“Shanghai is the only tier-one centre that currently excludes distressed real estate transactio­ns from home-buying restrictio­ns, and has witnessed some of the most online sales,’’ Seatune chief executive Liu Yanmeng said.

But such transactio­ns aren’t without risk. Some buyers have bought distressed property online only to realise significan­t taxation costs weren’t listed on the site.

One man in Shenzhen purchased a home in March for 3.7 million yuan and later discovered an additional 2.4 million yuan owing in value-added taxes, local media reported at the time.

Alibaba said in an emailed statement that its website “includes clear auction procedures and specific deposit requiremen­ts to ensure transparen­cy of the sale.”

“Buyers should conduct due diligence on the real estate itself to understand the situation,’’ said Yao Kunlun, a China advisory business director at Pricewater­houseCoope­rs.

“As pressure to resolve nonperform­ing loans rises, more and more real estate collateral will be put up for sale.”

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