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China Index Academy sales amounted to 415.9 billion yuan (HK$524.6 billion) for the three months to September. Photo: Reuters

Land sale revenue plunges in Chinese cities

Developers likely to study effect of relaxation measures before deciding land buying strategy

Land sales revenue in 300 mainland cities - not including Beijing - plunged by nearly half in the third quarter from the same period last year as developers shunned government land sales amid a market downturn.

Analysts said developers might adjust their land replenishment plans if they could be convinced sales would improve after the central and local governments took steps to relax restrictions in a bid to bolster the sluggish property sector.

The China Index Academy said sales in 300 cities amounted to 415.9 billion yuan (HK$525.6 billion) for the three months to September. Revenue from residential sites dropped by half to 265.3 billion yuan as developers cut back their budgets for land acquisition, it said.

A separate survey by another research institute, China Real Estate Information (CRIC), found that land-sales volume in 100 major cities fell 6 per cent quarter on quarter during the third quarter, to 995.2 million square metres. On a year-by-year basis, it was down 47 per cent.

Total sales revenues fell 18 per cent quarter on quarter to 127.8 billion yuan, down 75 per cent year on year. The average land transaction price fell 13 per cent quarter on quarter, or a 52 per cent decline year on year.

China's property sector has been weighed down by high inventories and tight credit. In some cities, such as Ningbo , developers said it would take two to three years to absorb the inventory of homes.

"Developers will finalise their land replenishment strategy after seeing the sales result this month," said David Hong, head of research at CRIC.

Developers were now waiting to see the impact on the market of a series of relaxation measures taken at the local and central level, he said.

On Tuesday, the People's Bank of China and the China Banking Regulatory Commission announced a broad easing of policies towards the sector, covering funding issues for social housing, home buyers and developers.

It is the first time the central government has relaxed housing policies since 2010.

Forty-one of the 46 cities that introduced home-purchase restrictions have relaxed them in the past few months in an effort to boost the sector.

CRIC said developers remained interested in land replenishment in first-tier cities like Beijing and Shanghai.

Hong Kong-based Centaline Property expects land-sales revenue in Beijing this year to surpass last year's 180 billion yuan.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Land sales revenue falls in 300 mainland cities
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