Khaleej Times

Fake divorce a path to rich buying hot China realty

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Earlier this year, Mr and Mrs Cai, a couple from Shanghai, decided to end their marriage. The rationale wasn’t irreconcil­able difference­s; rather, it was a property market bubble. The pair, who operate a clothing shop, wanted to buy an apartment for 3.6 million yuan ($532,583), adding to three places they already own.

But the local government had begun, among other bubble-fighting measures, to limit purchases by existing property holders. So in February, the couple divorced.

“Why would we worry about divorce? We’ve been married for so long,” said Cai, the husband, who requested that the couple’s full names not be used to avoid potential legal trouble. “If we don’t buy this apartment, we’ll miss the chance to get rich.”

China’s rising property prices this year have been inspiring such desperate measures, as frenzied buyers are seeking to act before further regulatory curbs are imposed. While the latest figures out Friday show easing in some of the hottest cities such as Beijing and Shanghai, the cost of new homes surged by the most in seven years in September.

On the whole, the real estate market “apparently cooled” in October following targeted measures rolled out in first-tier and some second-tier cities, China’s National Bureau of Statistics said in a statement. Local government­s in at least 21 cities have been introducin­g property curbs, such as requiring larger down-payments and limiting purchases of multiple dwellings in a bid to cool prices.

The impact of the curbs may be short-lived as regulators have shown no signs of tightening on the monetary front, according to analysts from UBS Group AG and Bank of Communicat­ions Co.

“The curbs will show their effect in the initial two-to-three months, but in the longer term idle capital will still likely flow to property in the largest hubs as ‘safe-heaven’ assets,” said Xia Dan, a Shanghaiba­sed analyst at Bank of Communicat­ions. The impact of the curbs will gradually abate as “liquidity is so abundant in a credit binge,” she said. In the first three quarters of 2016, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, average prices for new homes rose 30 per cent in tier-one cities such as Shanghai, and 13 per cent in smaller, tiertwo cities.

The boom traces to 2014, when the People’s Bank of China began easing lending requiremen­ts and cutting interest rates. The China Securities Regulatory Commission also lifted restrictio­ns on bond and stock sales by developers, helping them raise money for new projects. Soon, properties were selling for ever-larger sums in government land auctions. By June 2016, China’s 196 listed developers had incurred 3 trillion yuan in debt, up from 1.3 trillion three years before. In many cities, the price per square meter for undevelope­d land has risen higher than for existing apartments on a comparable plot next door, a situation the Chinese describe as “flour more expensive than bread.”

Officials have been trying to end the exuberance without harming the economy, a task made more difficult by the property fever’s uneven spread. Many smaller municipali­ties rely on property sales to plug holes in their budgets, giving them an incentive to increase the supply of developabl­e land. So while premier cities have seen tight supply and high prices, smaller ones have too many apartments and not enough buyers.

“Usually the market moves in tandem,” said Patrick Wong, an analyst with Bloomberg Intelligen­ce in Hong Kong. — Bloomberg

 ?? Bloomberg ?? average prices for new homes in China rose 30 per cent in tier-one cities and 13 per cent in smaller tier-two cities. —
Bloomberg average prices for new homes in China rose 30 per cent in tier-one cities and 13 per cent in smaller tier-two cities. —

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