Shanghai Daily news
A woman looks at a housing model displayed at the
Seventh Spring Real Estate Market Shanghai yesterday. Thousands swarmed the
event, which attracted more than 200 property developers. (Photo: Shanghai
Daily)
Shanghai residents do not seem to have dampened their enthusiasm
to buy property despite the introduction of austerity policies and warnings of
risks in the market, analysts said.
Thousands swarmed the Seventh Spring Real
Estate Market Shanghai yesterday, which attracted more than 200 property
developers, at the Shanghai Exhibition Center.
"The brisk scenes show strong
demand and consumption power to buy housing in Shanghai," said Chen Dongyu, an
official with Shanghai Zhonghao Exhibition & Service, the show's organizer.
The number of visitors is expected to well surpass last year's 85,000, Chen
projected. The Spring Real Estate Market is held annually in the city.
"Many
of my customers still plan to purchase apartments for investment purposes," said
Xue Guangyue, a sales manager at Shanghai Zhengting Property Development Co.
Meanwhile, the growth in Shanghai's housing prices may slow this year but
sharp price fluctuations are unlikely, said Colliers International, a real
estate consulting company.
"Housing prices will be differentiated to meet
different public demand for houses," said Lina Wong, managing director of
Colliers International East China.
Investors, especially those from overseas
markets, see the risks in Shanghai's property market as under
control.
"Shanghai's real estate market has grown a little bit too fast, but
the risks in the market are still manageable given Shanghai's robust economic
growth," said Albert Lau, managing director of Savills Shanghai, a sales and
leasing agent for ING Real Estate in the city.
The benchmark Shanghai Housing
Index, which covers sale prices and trading volume of new houses and apartments,
rose 2.1 percent to 1,429 points in February from a month earlier, said the
Shanghai Real Estate Index Office.
Given the booming real estate sector,
Shanghai's government and mortgage loan providers are tightening measures to
curb speculative bubbles.
Many local commercial banks are thinking of
drafting their own interest rates on individual mortgage loans following the
central bank's permission for banks to set higher rates based on their own
pricing mechanism.
On Wednesday, the People's Bank of China, the country's
central bank, lifted the minimum rate for a mortgage loan of more than
five years to 5.51 percent from 5.31 percent.