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China’s land sales slump for 4th month as property woes worsen – Metro US

China’s land sales slump for 4th month as property woes worsen

FILE PHOTO: Man rides a bicycle next to a construction
FILE PHOTO: Man rides a bicycle next to a construction site near residential buildings in Beijing

BEIJING (Reuters) -The Chinese government’s revenue from land sales slumped for a fourth month in October compared with year-ago levels, as cash-strapped developers moved cautiously on land buying after tighter regulatory curbs on new borrowing.

The value of government land sales in October declined 13.14% from a year earlier to 573.7 billion yuan ($89.90 billion), after suffering a drop of 11.15% in September, according to Reuters calculations of data released by the finance ministry on Friday.

Many developers including China Evergrande Group have grown desperately short of cash since authorities last year unveiled the “three red lines” – a policy of President Xi Jinping that imposes limits on liabilities-to-assets, net debt-to-equity, and cash-to-short-term borrowing ratios.

Poor demand among developers at urban land auctions risks squeezing regional finances, pressuring local governments to scramble for other income to fund investment and support the economy, including the issuance of more bonds that increase their debt obligations, say some analysts.

“Declining land sales will constrain fiscal funding for infrastructure, leading Chinese regional and local governments to temporarily shift to debt-funded growth,” Moody’s said in a recent report.

Not all provinces and regions are equally dependent on land-sale revenue.

“The unevenness in regional growth will persist, with developed provinces continuing to perform better than less-developed ones,” Moody’s said.

China’s government land-sale revenue grew 6.1% to 5.9371 trillion yuan ($930.29 billion) in January-October from a year earlier,data from the finance ministry showed, slowing from the 8.7% rise in the first nine months.

In February, the land regulator imposed restrictions on sales, allowing up to three auctions a year in 22 key cities including Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen, with the rules aimed at reining in rising land prices that could otherwise lead to higher home prices.

Private developers have bought at least 140.6 billion yuan of land in a completed round of auctions held by 22 major cities, down about 75% from 553.1 billion yuan in the first round of sales this year in March-June, according to a Reuters analysis of public notices on the sales.

China’s property woes have worsened in recent months, with prices lower in both new and resale homes in October amid deeper contractions in construction starts and investment by developers, weighing on the overall economic outlook.

($1 = 6.3816 Chinese yuan renminbi)

(Reporting by Liangping Gao and Ryan WooEditing by Mark Potter, Robert Birsel)