logo
#

Latest news with #ShiLulu

Shanghai's luxury home sales boom as wealthy buyers flock to ‘safe haven' assets
Shanghai's luxury home sales boom as wealthy buyers flock to ‘safe haven' assets

The Star

time3 days ago

  • Business
  • The Star

Shanghai's luxury home sales boom as wealthy buyers flock to ‘safe haven' assets

Luxury home sales in Shanghai are defying a nationwide slump, as wealthy buyers snap up 'safe haven' assets amid expectations of further price gains – a trend likely to continue given scarce inventory and rising land costs. In the first half of this year, the mainland's financial capital led in transactions of premium homes, accounting for sales of 482 new homes priced above 50 million yuan (US$7 million), more than 80 per cent of the total across 30 cities, according to data compiled by China Real Estate Information Corporation (CRIC). For homes priced above 30 million yuan, transactions in the city reached 1,096 units, accounting for 60 per cent of the 30-city total. Two other tier-one cities, Beijing and Shenzhen, followed with 12 per cent and 11 per cent, respectively, the research institute added. Nationwide, sales of new homes priced above 50 million yuan jumped nearly 50 per cent from a year earlier to 591 units, while sales of lived-in units in the same price category increased 43 per cent to 173 in the same period, according to CRIC. The surge was underpinned by both demand and supply factors, analysts said. On the demand side, Shanghai's premium homes were emerging as a 'clear safe-haven asset, offering stability amid relatively high risks in other cities', said Lu Wenxi, an analyst at Centaline Property in Shanghai. 'Given the scarcity of residential properties in the city centre and the solid fundamentals of the homes themselves, investing in premium homes makes sense from both a risk and value-appreciation perspective,' he added. 'After all, there aren't many options for those with capital to deploy.' On the supply side, a policy move last June to scrap the cap on land prices in Shanghai has also helped to sustain the value of properties. Leading developers continue to focus their land acquisitions in prime locations within core cities 'as reflected in the rising land premium rates this year in tier-one and strong tier-two cities', said Shi Lulu, director of Asia-Pacific corporate ratings at Fitch Ratings. New home sales in China were expected to decline by about 15 per cent this year, according to an earlier forecast by Fitch. 'Premium projects in top-tier cities are expected to provide ongoing support for the performance of upgrade-oriented sales,' she said, adding that growth in the high-end segment could help the property sector temper the slowdown. Centaline's Lu said Shanghai's premium home prices would continue to rise. 'Land in the city centre is running out,' he said. 'With no land available, demolition becomes necessary, but the costs of demolition and relocation are rising each year, and housing price expectations are getting higher as costs increase.' Shanghai was also one of China's only cities that managed to defy a broad-based decline in new home prices in June, as the country's property slump is set to enter its fifth year, despite official measures to support the sector that once accounted for a quarter of the country's gross domestic product. Nationwide, new home sales fell to 9.7 trillion yuan in 2024 – less than half the level recorded in 2021, according to government data. - SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST

Analysts expect China property recovery in 2025 after seeing January improvement
Analysts expect China property recovery in 2025 after seeing January improvement

South China Morning Post

time09-02-2025

  • Business
  • South China Morning Post

Analysts expect China property recovery in 2025 after seeing January improvement

Analysts believe a broad recovery in China's property market would come this year, after new home prices in first-tier cities rose in January, while a decline in the second-hand market slowed. New home prices in China's top-tier cities rose 0.36 per cent in January from a month earlier, according to a report released earlier this month by the China Index Academy, a real estate research firm. 'The year-on-year improvement in sales value shows [better] market sentiment, particularly among homebuyers in large cities,' said Jeff Zhang, an equity analyst at Morningstar. 'We foresee new home prices stabilising in 2025 and ticking up thereafter, but a recovery for existing home prices may take longer.' In Beijing, new home prices rose by 0.09 per cent to an average of 45,621 yuan (US$6,265) per square metre, while prices in Shanghai climbed 0.57 per cent to 57,127 yuan per square metre. On an annualised basis, new home prices in the two cities appreciated 1.2 per cent and 10.7 per cent, respectively. Transaction volume in first-tier cities fell 33 per cent in January from a month earlier to 1.52 million square metres, according to a recent report from the China Real Estate Information Corp. It said this was because businesses paused ahead of the Lunar New Year holiday in late January. But transaction volume rose 56 per cent from a year earlier thanks to a low base of comparison in the year-earlier period. Demand for premium housing in Shanghai was particularly strong, according to a January report from S&P Global, which said 3,100 homes priced at more than 30 million yuan were sold last year. It added that 80 per cent of those were new units, accounting for more than half of China's total premium home sales, it said. 'We anticipate a temporary rebound in the housing and rental markets following the Lunar New Year, as this period is traditionally a quieter time for real estate activity,' said Shi Lulu, director of Asia-Pacific corporate ratings at Fitch Ratings.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store