Bangkok Post

China’s Chongqing bucks the slowdown

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CHONGQING: In many Chinese cities, government restrictio­ns have cooled formerly feverish property markets, but in the southweste­rn city of Chongqing, constructi­on is booming and sales soaring as investors rush in.

The most audacious evidence is one of the newest additions to the city’s skyline, a mega project of eight futuristic high-rises, six of which are connected by a vertiginou­s skybridge.

The behemoth Raffles City Chongqing looms over a bend in the Jialing River, where its dark-green waters meet the muddy currents of the Yangtze.

The 73-storey towers, part of a project built at a cost of $4.8 billion, are unmistakea­ble proof that a slowdown which has seen sales slump nationwide has not taken hold in Chongqing.

In recent years, Beijing has banned capital flight, curbing investment­s in foreign projects like a luxury developmen­t built by Chinese developers in Malaysia.

And authoritie­s have tightened regulation­s in the country’s main cities, requiring buyers to show proof of residence before purchasing homes.

Those rules have benefitted places like Chongqing, a key logistics staging point in China’s Belt and Road Initiative.

The city is China’s largest market in terms of area of residentia­l apartments sold: some 31.23 million square metres of new homes were sold in 2018, with sales of new homes jumping 64.3% in March, compared to a 0.6% drop nationally.

And the sales came despite Chongqing’s economy losing steam after years of double-digit growth, with its gross domestic product growing just 5.3% in 2018 — well below the national pace.

The scale of constructi­on has been so rapid that prices have begun to drop as supply stacks up, but the lower prices are helping attract buyers.

“Chongqing is now at a point where there is an abundance of supply and it’s in a phase of market correction,” said Andrew Deng, managing director for western China at property consultanc­y CBRE.

“It’s a buyer’s market and many are taking advantage of that,” he added.

Prices for a 98-square-metre onebedroom unit at Raffles City starts at four million yuan ($580,000), and developers say three-quarters of the project’s 1,400 residentia­l units have been sold.

Potential buyers reportedly including diplomatic missions, as well as tech and finance firms.

But for many locals, whose average monthly salary in 2016 was 6,100 yuan ($880), properties like Raffles City represent another out-of-reach part of the cityscape.

“I suppose there will be some influence on the housing price nearby, which will probably go up,” said local Wang Mingjun.

He noted that traditiona­l porters working the docks in the area had been cleared out during the property’s developmen­t

“Some people consider that it’s too modern and it will damage the traditiona­l dock culture,” Wang added.

 ?? AFP ?? This picture taken on March 22, 2019 shows a worker walking at the constructi­on site of the Raffles City Chongqing.
AFP This picture taken on March 22, 2019 shows a worker walking at the constructi­on site of the Raffles City Chongqing.

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