New | China’s sizzling land prices ups risk for slowing economy
The polarisation of China’s real estate market is increasing risks to the world’s No 2 economy.
The frenzy in the four tier-1 cities -- Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenzhen, which combined account for 11 per cent of the whole country’s real estate investment adds to concerns about a sustainable recovery.
“While projects in tier-1 cities generally have secure demand and larger room for average selling price expansion, not all tier-1 city projects are lucrative for developers, and the level of management required for tier-1 city projects (vs. lower-tier cities) is higher,” said Jonas Kan, property analyst at Daiwa Capital Markets.
Still, developers regard them as a domestic safe haven, while also moving their capacity to overseas markets such as the United States, Australia and Malaysia.
The bidding wars for the limited supply of parcels in China’s tier-1 cities are sending land costs above the selling price of existing flats in the immediate vicinity.
Official data showed China’s land price rise has far outpaced housing inflation in the past three years. A rising number of developers, including the aggressive luxury home builder Sunac China, have been expressing their worries over the situation.