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Huawei’s new campus in Dongguan. Photo: Reuters

Greater Bay Area manufacturing hub Dongguan reports rise in home prices amid increased liquidity, speculative buying

  • City’s average home prices had risen by 17 per cent year on year by the end of June
  • Home sales have risen 20 per cent in the first six months to 55.7 billion yuan

Dongguan, a city in China’s Greater Bay Area development zone that is also home to Huawei Technologies’ new campus, has recorded a sharp increase in home prices, which have been boosted by increased liquidity and speculative buying driven by hopes around its economy.

“My landlord last year asked me whether I would like to buy the 110 square metre home I live in for 3.6 million yuan [US$514,096]. We, however, passed up on it, as we found it a bit over our budget. And now it is priced at 5 million yuan. Who can tell me why?” Vic Li, a Dongguan resident, said in a recent social media post on Douban.com.

The city’s average home prices had risen by 17 per cent year on year to 22,813 yuan per square metre by the end of June. The city has also topped an index compiled by online property consultancy Bingshan Property, which tracks prices of old homes in 62 major Chinese cities, since the fourth week of May.

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According to the latest data, the prices of old homes on average had risen by 6.4 per cent in the second week of July compared with prices in the second week of June. In Shenzhen, which ranks second in terms of price rises on the index, the average price of old homes rose by 2.5 per cent in the same period.

The city has recorded home sales worth 55.7 billion yuan in the first six months of this year, a 20 per cent increase over last year.

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An analyst said the sharp increase in prices was being fuelled by increased liquidity. “It is mainly due to the ample money freshly injected into the economy [by the Chinese central bank]. Most people still feel safer buying homes over other assets. That’s why we are seeing money flood into property markets in [Greater Bay Area] cities such as Dongguan. This results in a surge in demand, which pushes home prices higher,” said Yan Yuejin, director of Shanghai-based E-house China Research and Development Institution.

The People’s Bank of China, the country’s central bank, vowed last week to keep financial liquidity at a reasonable and adequate level in the second half of 2020, as Beijing tackles the impact of the coronavirus outbreak on the Chinese economy.

New yuan-denominated loans are expected to reach about 20 trillion yuan this year, while the total amount of social financing is poised to exceed 30 trillion yuan, according to Yi Gang, the central bank’s governor.

Shenzhen leads the way as China turns to property investment frenzy to boost growth

Dongguan is located between Shenzhen and Guangzhou in China’s southern Guangdong province. It is a manufacturing hub and has seen an influx of talent, as more companies move to the city. Huawei, for example, moved more than 25,000 people from Shenzhen last year to its new campus in the city.

“Favourable policies in Dongguan and its neighbouring cities let people believe that their economies will only go up, and thus they choose to buy homes here,” Yan said.

 
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