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Chinese builders face a tough choice: sacrifice profit now to generate cash or wait for better times

  • Increasingly, developers face hard trade-off: to sell homes cheaply now or to wait for an easing of price controls and credit lines
  • The huge discounts involved have been drawing hoards of potential buyers, who have in turn shunned more expensive lived-in homes

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New apartment blocks under construction in Foshan, China. Photo: Martin Williams
Zheng Yangpengin Beijing

Chinese developers are increasingly being forced to sell their new units at losses, or close to cost, in order to get buyers into their showrooms and generate cash, amid a clampdown on financing that forms part of the government’s campaign to pare back debt.

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The huge discounts involved have been drawing hoards of potential buyers, who have in turn shunned more expensive lived-in homes and new units that are charging market rates.

Yanlord Riverbay, a project in downtown Chengdu by Singaporean builder Yanlord Land, recently attracted over 12,000 entries to a lottery process to compete for just 207 new flats priced at 19,000 to 21,500 yuan per square metre. That is a discount of about a quarter on the last phase, sold in October 2016, and far below its second-hand homes which currently fetch more than 30,000 yuan per sq m.

A prime project by China Resources Land drew 11,000 subscriptions for 356 flats priced at 16,000-17,600 yuan per sq m, compared with 25,000 yuan for second-hand homes in the same district.

Both projects cleared their offerings on the first day of sales.

“Cash flow is the king. In the face of a tightening of funding and no sign of price curbs being eased, some developers are compromising their margin for faster cash collection. More developers could follow,” said Lu Wenxi, a senior research manager with Centaline Shanghai.

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Though the practice erodes developer’s profitability, it gives them much-needed cash flow that reduces their dependence on bank financing.

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