How China's housing plan backfired

When President Jinping vowed to increase the supply of rental housing last year, China expected to find homes they would finally be able to afford. REUTERS/Jason Lee/File Photo

When President Jinping vowed to increase the supply of rental housing last year, China expected to find homes they would finally be able to afford. REUTERS/Jason Lee/File Photo

Published Sep 14, 2018

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BEIJING/HANGZHOU - When President Xi Jinping of China vowed to increase the supply of rental housing last year, millions of young Chinese expected to find homes they would finally be able to afford.

But the government’s initiative has had an unintended effect: a surge of property investors into the rental market that has dramatically pushed up prices.

This summer, rents in China’s major cities soared in the double-digits, forcing the people that Xi vowed to help – many of them white-collar workers or recent college graduates – to downgrade to smaller flats and relocate to less desirable neighborhoods.

Companies flush with investor funding – like Ziroom and 5I5J - have been aggressively developing hundreds of thousands of rental homes in the past year.

But the homes do not come cheap, despite the increased supply. The average rent in Beijing jumped 21.16 percent year-on-year in August, compared with 3.12 percent a year earlier, data from the China Real Estate Association (CREA) shows. Similar trends were seen in other major Chinese cities.

In 2017, Wang Zhilu, 23, rented a room in a mid-tier Beijing neighborhood for $438.17 (R6 400) a month. Now, he pays 4,500 yuan for a room in a similar area.

Soaring rents have fueled widespread public frustration as the cost of living surges in cities, outpacing salary growth for many people.

“Rent now makes up about 30 percent of my salary while my housing condition is worse,” said Tian Enyu, a 35-year-old divorced office manager in Beijing.

At least 19 provincial capitals have seen rents soar this summer, with Chengdu in Sichuan province posting the biggest year-on-year rise of 32.95 percent in August, according to CREA.

AGGRESSIVE EXPANSION

Investors have been piling into the rental housing sector.

Ziroom, which is owned by Zuo Hui, chairman of the Chinese real estate broker Lianjia, raised 4 billion yuan in January from investors including Tencent Holdings, Warburg Pincus and Sequoia Capital.

The Singapore sovereign wealth fund GIC launched a 4.3 billion yuan venture with Nova Property Investment in May to acquire rental apartments in cities like Beijing and Shanghai.

Tiger Global Management, a US-based global investment firm, led a $70 million financing round in June for Danke, a Beijing-based rental flat operator.

Ziroom had about half a million rooms in China and commanded a market share of 30 percent at the end of 2017, according to Reuters calculations based on an April report by Meadin.com.

Xiangyu, a rental unit owned by 5I5J, was a close second with a 27 percent share.

About 1.66 million rooms were owned or managed by rental companies and developers at the end of last year, according to Meadin.

Ziroom and Xiangyu typically source units from property owners. They then renovate the properties and rent them out at a premium, which some experts call a “forced upgrade” for tenants.

“These companies are very aggressive in securing flats this year,” said Yu Runze, who leased his two-bedroom Beijing apartment to Ziroom for 7,800 yuan a month in May after rejecting an offer from Xiangyu.

The rent that Xiangyu charges is often double the price that it pays to flat owners for their properties, said Zhang Yongjing, a former property agent with 5I5J in northern Shanxi province’s capital, Taiyuan.

Reuters could not reach Ziroom for comment. 5I5J did not respond to a request for comment.

LITTLE OVERSIGHT

REUTERS/Aly Song/File Photo

While the rental giants have been accused of driving up prices, a lack of regulations means that regulators have limited power to act or enforce existing rules, according to property analysts and a government source.

In August, Beijing’s housing authority ordered rental firms to stop acquiring rental listings at above market prices using funds procured from banks and other financial channels.

However, it did not take action against companies believed to be using such practices.

A housing ministry source also said the body does not have an official rent tracking system, though it is “closely monitoring the situation”.

Some analysts also blamed the persistent shortage of rental supply for the high rents.

Government-funded public rental homes are limited, with the overall land supply shrinking in China’s biggest cities amid stricter population control.

There are 900 000 homes that are technically available for rent in Beijing, according to Hu Jinghui, a former vice president at 5I5J, but Chinese home owners prefer to let them sit empty and wait for the value of their investments to rise over time.

The government does not publish an official home vacancy rate.

The housing ministry and the statistics bureau did not respond to requests for comment.

-REUTERS 

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