Shanghai's transaction volume of new properties decreased by three percentage
points while the average price increased dramatically in the first week after
the central government's latest regulatory measures were enacted on June 1,
Youth Daily reported today.
The central government made it more
difficult to sell a property from June 1 by imposing a 5.5 percent tax on the
total sale price of a property sold within five years, from the previous two
years.
The transaction volume of newly sold properties was 4,096 from June 2 to June
8, sliding by 37.7 percent, compared to the previous week. The volume of
residences was 3,607 of the total, down 27.8 percent from the week before June
1, according to the statistics from a local property service Website.
Meanwhile, high-end houses, costing a minimum of 10,000 yuan (US$1,249) per
square meter, saw robust sales since June 2, thanks to a strong demand, which
boosted the average property price by almost two percentage points, compared to
the previous week.
The average price of new properties was 10,756 yuan per square meter last
week, increasing by 18 percent from a week ago, of which residential use was
10,976 yuan per square meter, up 21.3 percent, according to the Website.
Taking one luxury residence on Huashan Rd, in Changning District, as an
example, it had a transaction volume of 116 last week, with an average price
above 20,000 yuan per square meter, ranking first on the sales board.
Buyers and sellers of low-and-medium priced homes have been taking a
wait-and-see type of attitude, which lead to a placid residential market, with
lower transaction volumes, pointed out real estate experts.
The calm in the market is expected to prolong, especially during the period
when strings of detailed policies may be implemented by local governments, said
experts.
(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)