Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Demand for rental homes stays strong in Shanghai

Special Report:Global Financial Crisis





BEIJING, Feb. 3 -- While Shanghai's overall housing market remained weak

over the past month with substantial drops in both supply and sales, leasing

demand for apartments in the city's suburban areas seemed rather strong during

the week-long Spring Festival holiday, the city's largest real estate brokerage

firm has found.

"Leasing demand proved to be quite robust for apartments located beyond the

Outer Ring Road as transactions rose by up to 30 percent compared with the

period a year earlier," said Lu Hong, a marketing official at Shanghai Centaline

Property Consultants Ltd, which has about 160 branches across the city.

"On the contrary, leasing sentiment for downtown homes

remained subdued with significant drops in viewing appointments." Lu added.

Falling rents, together with increasing demand from job-seekers from other

parts of the country, helped boost the low-end leasing market, industry

officials said.

Centaline figures showed that rents have dipped some 5 percent on average

in remote areas of the city where a two-bedroom furnished apartment usually

commands 1,500 yuan (220 U.S. dollars) a month, and many of the tenants are from

other parts of the country.

The mid to high-class leasing market, where a two-bedroom apartment would

cost at least 3,500 yuan a month to rent, is expected to recover as early as the

middle this month, said Jin Xiaofeng, head of Centaline's Jing'an District

operations.

The same picture is also emerging in the sales market.

More home buyers were interested in apartments between the Middle and Outer

Ring Roads during the holiday, a Centaline survey showed.

(Source: Shanghai Daily)





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