No deal yet for Shanghai's costliest flats By Cao Li and Wang Xu (China Daily) Updated: 2005-11-08 05:50
Developers of the Gloria Harbour View project, the other project with the
same "incomparable location," has decided to postpone its launch and is
considering leasing rather than selling the apartments, in response to the
recent sluggish market.
According to Shanghai's
official real estate website, not a single deal has been
confirmed.
| The average price of luxury
residential properties in Shanghai fell 4.5 per cent in the third quarter, as
most buyers adopted a wait-and-see attitude, according to a report by Colliers
International, a real estate agent.
According to Colliers, the vacancy rate of luxury housing dropped to 11.3 per
cent from 11.7 per cent over the same period as developers suspended the launch
of new projects.
An unnamed analyst from the city's Diheng Property Consulting revealed there
were still apartments, totalling 330,000 square metres, awaiting buyers in the
Lujiazui area
Remy Chan, national director of Jones Lang LaSalle, said the Riviera project
will mainly attract investors, particularly private business owners from the
mainland, Hong Kong, Singapore and other east Asian countries.
On October 26, the Shanghai branch of China's State Administration of Foreign
Exchange required non-Chinese mainland residents to apply for approval when
paying for luxury properties in foreign currency worth more than US$1 million.
The move is an attempt by the municipal government to track the inflow of
overseas capital into the property sector, considered one of the major factors
inflating the city's housing prices.
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