Source:
https://scmp.com/property/hong-kong-china/article/1888025/china-land-grabs-sow-seeds-next-property-boom
Property/ Hong Kong & China

China land grabs sow seeds of next property boom

Leading developers buy new plots in major cities as sales improve while prices in much of the country are still falling, widening the economic gap

A man walks past a wall at a construction site for a new residential compound at the Binhai new district in Tianjin, China, October 18, 2015. With prices of new homes rising by about 10 percent since the August chemical blast to meet an increase in demand, finding new homes outside the disaster area for most of those affected is a costly - and frustrating - process. Picture taken October 18, 2015. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon

In the Chaoyang district of Beijing, a nondescript wall covered in patriotic posters protects one of the city’s most valuable treasures: a dirt field containing nothing but a few scattered trees.

Last month, the block sold for 3.3 billion yuan, according to Beijing Municipal Bureau of Land and Resources data, meaning the cost to the developer of each apartment built would be above the price at which nearby homes currently changed hands once a commitment to build a quota of affordable housing was factored in.

“The flour is more expensive than the bread,” said Guo Yi, a market director at Yahao, a real estate consulting agency in Beijing, using a Chinese proverb to describe how undeveloped land in some prime locations has become more expensive than secondhand apartments. “We see increasing risks.”

Such speculative pressure underlines a growing distortion in China’s housing market.

While property prices in much of China are still falling, a rebound is under way in the biggest cities, bringing with it the return of land speculation that could stoke another bubble and widening the economic gap between first-tier centres and the rest.

In the Chaoyang project, the winning developer, a joint venture between Poly Real Estate Group and Beijing Capital Development, agreed that more than half the housing on the site would be built under a government affordable housing scheme.

The scheme aims to allow more of China’s middle and lower-income households to share the dream of owning their own home, but also makes the project more expensive for the developer.

Home prices in Beijing rose 6.5 per cent in October from a year earlier. Photo: Reuters
Home prices in Beijing rose 6.5 per cent in October from a year earlier. Photo: Reuters
Analysts said the 41,964 sq metre plot equated to a maximum 117,498 sq metres of apartment space, meaning the developer was paying 28,086 yuan per square metre, rising to more than 60,000 yuan per square metre when the cost of building the affordable housing was included.

At that price, the commercial housing to be built on the site would need to be sold for more than 100,000 yuan per square metre, about triple the price of existing homes nearby, for the project to be profitable, analysts said.

Another option would be to try to resell the plot at a profit.

“It sounds crazy to me that prices could reach so high,” said a woman surnamed Wang who lives in a nearby affordable housing project. “It just doesn’t seem worth it to me.”

Beijing’s buoyant land market typifies an emerging trend. Leading developers are buying new lots of land in major cities amid a backdrop of improved property sales and a loosening monetary environment.

It sounds crazy to me that prices could reach so high. It just doesn’t seem worth it to me Resident in Beijing

“Developers are making land grabs in big cities because everyone thinks first-tier cities are safe,” said an official at a medium-sized listed property company in Beijing. “We are worried about risks of overheating.”

On a nationwide basis, house prices posted their first annual rise in 14 months during October, a weighted average gain of 0.1 per cent. On a monthly basis, prices grew 0.2 per cent, official data showed.

Even a modest recovery in a sector that accounts for 15 per cent of gross domestic product is a welcome boost for an economy heading for its weakest growth in 25 years.

But the gains were largely concentrated in major cities, reflecting an increasingly unbalanced housing recovery.

Prices in Shenzhen rose 39.9 per cent in October from a year earlier, while they were up 10.9 per cent in Shanghai and 6.5 per cent in Beijing. In monthly terms, prices rose in only 27 of 70 cities, however.

Local government revenue from land sales in China’s 10 biggest cities jumped 24 per cent in October from a year earlier, a private survey showed.

While there are ceilings on land prices, some local governments are auctioning land bundles – land and a commitment to build a set amount of affordable housing – that make the cost of building non-social housing much higher.

That has the effect of pushing up property prices in major cities, where demand is strong. But outside the top-tier cities, excess supply and a weaker economy are discouraging new construction and investment.

The average residential land prices in first-tier cities, including Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenzhen, reached 17,680 yuan per square metre in the third quarter of this year, compared with 2,377 yuan in smaller third-tier cities, according to data from the land ministry.

“Land is more expensive than secondhand houses in some parts of Beijing, but not everywhere, because developers are confident that real estate prices will continue to rise,” said a property developer at one of the state-owned enterprises. “I wouldn’t say the Beijing property market is overheated, it’s just warm.”