Shanghai launched 20 plots of land for public bidding yesterday,
the first time this year, after measures aimed at curbing surging
housing prices were introduced.
With a combined area of 178 hectares, most of the land plots are
located in suburban areas of Shanghai, including Baoshan, Jiading
and Minhang districts and Chongming Island, according to a Shanghai
Housing and Land Administrative Bureau's statement on its official
Website.
Domestic and foreign real estate developers should submit their
bidding applications to district land bureaus and the deadline for
the submission varies, depending on plot area.
Analysts said the municipal government made the move in
anticipation the central government would not introduce new
measures for the property market in the near term.
China launched a slew of new loan, tax and land policies in the
past three months including raising the down payment ratio and
income tax levies to cool an overheated real estate market.
"These might be the last set of property market measures in the
near term, and the central government might likely watch and
evaluate the impact of the recent measures before introducing new
ones," said Tony Tsang, an analyst with Citigroup Research.
The land bidding also seeks to gauge the response from
developers who may have lost their appetite for this type of
bidding as more well-funded developers look for land in the
secondary market.
"The land in the secondary market is usually offered at a more
attractive price by some financially constraint sellers and may
have better location," said Zheng Kangrui, vice general manager of
Shanghai Vanke Real Estate Group Co, a unit under Vanke Group,
China's biggest listed property firm.
The bureau didn't release an exact ratio requirement for
apartments less than 90 square meters for each residential land in
yesterday's bidding invitation, saying it will vary on a plot
basis.
A central government policy requires at least 70 percent of new
apartments built in a city to be less than 90 square meters.
The current ratio is 40 percent as small size apartments mean
higher costs and low profit margin for developers.
(Shanghai Daily August 18, 2006)