Beijing's
commercial property and office building sales surged 320.5 percent in
the first 10 days of March, as more investors shifted their focus in
response to the government's new measures to cool down the residential sector.
Real estate brokerage company Century 21st said on Thursday that
759 units of commercial properties were sold and registered online from
March 1 to 10, accounting for 6.3 percent of all transactions recorded
during the period.
The surge in commercial-property transactions followed the latest moves by the State Council to control the property market.
It said on March 1 that homeowners who sell their homes will be
levied an income tax of 20 percent on the profit they make on a
transaction. Before the new rules, the income tax was 1 to 2 percent of
the sale price.
"It is obvious that investment-oriented purchases of residential
housing will be further restrained, and the government intends to weaken
the investment characteristics of home buying," said Kou Hailong,
general manager of Century 21st Beijing.
"So it is natural that more investors are turning their eyes to
commercial properties when other investment channels are limited," he
added.
The commercial sector of Jin Mao Palace, a project close to
Beijing's CBD area, is scheduled to put up 154 units for sale around the
end of March at an average price of 49,800 yuan ($8,008) per square
meters.
However, there are so many potential buyers that the registration for purchases was closed within one day.
"Even for those who have registered their names to buy the units,
they have to draw lots to decide who can get the unit they want," a
manager at the sales department said.
Commercial projects due to be launched on the market in the following months are expected to raise their prices.
In fact, following the government's stricter controls on
residential property in 2010 and 2011, many Chinese investors have been
exploring commercial property to continue to benefit from rising land
values.
In Beijing, the market where restrictions on residential real
estate purchases were most closely regulated, commercial real estate
grew 23 percent in value in 2012, according to a report by real estate
advisory company Knight Frank.
Knight Frank expects these cities, especially Beijing, to continue to improve in value in the near future.
Knight Frank's research also shows high potential for growth in
lower-tier cities as many developments are launched in these markets.
In the wake of infrastructure and economic pushes undertaken by
local governments, many lower-tier cities are developing potentially
lucrative commercial property projects.
More mixed-use developments are also expected to come onto the market in the near term.
"Beijing's growth in this sector has been phenomenal, and we
expect this to persist as long as restrictions on residential real
estate continue," said Nick Cao, Knight Frank China manager, head of
investments and capital markets.
"As for lower-tier cities, retail
is a good option to consider as demand from local consumers is quite
strong while some cities will focus on manufacturing and the industrial
sector, which will pushes down the value of office and hotel space."
huyuanyuan@chinadaily.com.cn
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