Bangkok Post

Youth homes

Investors rush to develop ‘temporary homes’ for young profession­als as Chinese house prices surge, writes Clare Jim of Reuters in Hong Hong

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Footloose millennial­s fuel demand for rentals in China

China’s sky-high apartment prices and its footloose generation of millennial­s are fuelling demand for rental apartments, driving investment by foreign private equity funds and Chinese real estate developers.

The country has been very much a home-owner’s market since opening up to the outside world in the 1980s and its home ownership ratio is now one of the highest in the world at about 90%.

But that is beginning to change as home price gains far outpace income growth, making the prospects of buying a home an increasing­ly distant dream for many young Chinese.

Newer generation­s of tech-savvy workers also want to be able to move quickly without being tied down by a property if a better job opportunit­y opens up in another city.

A typical two-bedroom new home in Beijing costs around six million yuan ($870,000), about 69 times the average per capita disposable income in the city, much higher than the ratio of less than 25 times for New York City. It is a similar tale in many of the largest Chinese cities, such as Shanghai and Shenzhen.

US private equity firm Warburg Pincus LLC is among the foreign investors who have taken note. It has invested $500 million with China’s Avic Trust Co Ltd in so-called “white-collar apartment” manager Mofang, which started its business in 2010 and now operates 30,000 rental units across the country.

Another rental apartment platform, Mogoroom, has attracted investment from South Korean venture capital firm KTB Network Co Ltd. Also Greystar Real Estate Partners LLC, the largest apartment manager in the United States, says it is looking for opportunit­ies in major Chinese cities.

I was new to the city and didn’t have many friends, so I thought living with other young people would be more fun. I like to party. DAVID CHEN YOUTH APARTMENT TENANT

Chinese developers China Vanke Co Ltd and Longfor Properties Co Ltd are betting big on the so-called youth apartment market, which is aimed primarily at 20-40 year-olds.

Vanke aims to add 150,000 rental units to the market in the coming two years, while Longfor is looking at growing by 15,000 units each year.

Targeting young profession­als means landlords can’t charge high rents. Developers, such as Vanke and Longfor, are mostly leasing or buying under-utilized assets such as hotels, offices and warehouses and redevelopi­ng them into rental units as the returns are much higher than if they bought land and built a new developmen­t.

Vanke says in this model, gross profit margin for their rental apartments is in the 20-30 percent range, up to 10 percentage points higher than its overall property developmen­t business in 2016.

Still, the industry is in the early ramp-up investment stages in China and the profits are yet to flow into accounts in a meaningful way.

And there may be plenty more rental developmen­t to come. Realtor Lianjia Real Estate forecasts that the sector will almost triple to $420.5 billion in annual rental payments by 2025.

COMMON SPACE

When David Chen, 29, relocated a year ago to an advertisin­g company in the southern city of Shenzhen — one of the country’s most expensive property markets — he decided a “youth apartment” was his best bet for housing.

Many youth apartments feature a “co-living” theme with a common space where tenants can socialise after work. They also have live-in managers who organise weekly events such as movie nights, cooking parties, and field trips.

“I was new to the city and didn’t have many friends, so I thought living with other young people would be more fun. I like to party,” said Chen, who pays 2,800 yuan a month, or around 20% of his salary, for an apartment operated by China Vanke, the country’s No. 2 developer by sales.

His en-suite room is around 25 square metres. It fits a double-sized bed and small wardrobe, but has no kitchen.

“To buy a two-bedroom unit you’d need at least one million yuan for a downpaymen­t and I can’t afford it now,” Chen said, adding that a short-term lease was preferable as he may have to relocate to Shanghai after a few years.

The investors are being helped by a government-backed drive to support rental supply in a bid to rein in property prices and satisfy housing demand. The authoritie­s have allowed commercial properties to be redevelope­d into rental apartments, and encouraged banks to provide financing to rental apartment companies.

“The biggest challenge is to turn rental apartments into a sustainabl­e and scalable business in China, from developmen­t to exit,” said Charles Ma, China managing director of Greystar, which manages more than $17 billion in assets globally.

He cited high land and financing costs, and taxes as issues for developers getting into the rental market.

SUPPLY GLUT

For major foreign investors it is also difficult to find developmen­ts of a size — worth $50 million or more — that would make sense.

And in some places, there are already signs of a glut of rental apartments.

“In China, if something is good then everyone jumps in,” said Ma. “For example, over the past year there are many ‘youth apartments’ built across cities and the occupancy rate is often not too high. The sudden boost in supply may create a glut in the short term, but that creates trading opportunit­ies and consolidat­ion will eliminate the non-serious or small players.”

One very positive sign is that renters are starting to stay longer because of the home price crunch.

“In the past, youth apartments could only retain young tenants for two to three years, then they’d purchase a property when they got married. But this period is getting longer and people are also getting married at a later age in big cities, so demand for these apartments is only getting greater,” said Jones Lang LaSalle Inc head of research East China Joe Zhou.

Most developers have yet to address the market for newlywed couples and those with young families, though Mogoroom has some buildings with larger apartments.

There is traditiona­l resistance in Chinese culture to renting rather than buying after getting married — and many couples still see owning a property as a prerequisi­te for marriage.

The youth and white-collar apartments don’t appeal to newly married people such as 26-year-old Fiona Zhang.

“These apartments are usually quite small, which are not suitable for wedded couples who plan to have kids,” said Zhang, who owns a marketing start-up in Shenzhen and got married late last year.

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 ??  ?? A corridor is seen at a so-called youth apartment in Shenzhen.
A corridor is seen at a so-called youth apartment in Shenzhen.
 ??  ?? A 25-square-metre unit fits a double-sized bed and small wardrobe, but has no kitchen.
A 25-square-metre unit fits a double-sized bed and small wardrobe, but has no kitchen.
 ??  ?? Many apartments have common areas where tenants can socialise after work.
Many apartments have common areas where tenants can socialise after work.
 ??  ?? These apartments are quite small, which are not suitable for wedded couples who plan to have kids.
These apartments are quite small, which are not suitable for wedded couples who plan to have kids.
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 ??  ?? Targeting young profession­als means landlords can’t charge high rents. TOP
Targeting young profession­als means landlords can’t charge high rents. TOP
 ??  ?? One very positive sign is that renters are starting to stay longer because of the home price crunch. RIGHT
One very positive sign is that renters are starting to stay longer because of the home price crunch. RIGHT
 ??  ?? MAIN PHOTO The exterior of a building with so-called youth apartments by Chinese developer China Vanke Co Ltd is seen in Shenzhen.
MAIN PHOTO The exterior of a building with so-called youth apartments by Chinese developer China Vanke Co Ltd is seen in Shenzhen.
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