Chinese buyers snap up luxury homes as ‘hard currency’ in soft property market

    • China new luxury homes are still popular with buyers, who see them as “hard currency” in a feeble property market.
    • China new luxury homes are still popular with buyers, who see them as “hard currency” in a feeble property market. PHOTO: REUTERS
    Published Mon, Sep 19, 2022 · 07:00 PM

    IN the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen, where the real estate sector has slowed, luxury property is bucking the downtrend, the official Securities Times reported on Monday (Sep 19), as wealthy buyers seek a safe haven amid a weak market.

    In the southern tech hub, a total of 604 units in a luxury development that has not yet been built have been presold for up to 162,000 yuan (S$32,541.6) per square metre, it said.

    With the units ranging in size to up to 425 square meters, that suggests some could have reached values of US$9.8 million.

    In May, units at a project going for at least 18 million yuan each were sold out on the first day they were launched, the newspaper said.

    China’s property market has slowed sharply in recent months, with prices and sales both falling after authorities stepped in to cut excessive debt held by property developers, triggering a liquidity crunch and hitting buyer sentiment.

    But new luxury homes are still popular with buyers, who see them as “hard currency” in a feeble property market, the newspaper cited industry insiders as saying.

    Demand has remained bleak despite a slew of stimulus measures imposed by over 200 cities to stoke buyers’ interest, with property sales by floor area falling 48 per cent on year in August.

    In contrast, in the first half of this year, the average selling price of luxury properties valued at 10 million yuan and above rose 11 per cent from a year earlier, according to China Real Estate Information (CRIC), an independent property consultancy service. REUTERS

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