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China’s city land sales surge 73 per cent despite cooling measures

Many mainland developers, sitting on piles of cash after achieving record sales last year, are still hungry for land

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A historical building being moved to make way for new construction in Wuhan, Hubei Province, one of the second-tier cities that have been leading land sales this year. Photo: Reuters

China’s land sales in 50 major cities surged 73 per cent in the first two months of 2017 despite a raft of measures rolled out in a bid to cool the red-hot property market.

Fifty city governments received a total of 452.8 billion yuan (US$65.6 billion) from land auctions during January and February this year, up from 262.5 billion yuan in the same period of 2016, Centaline Property data shows.

Second-tier cities including Wuhan in Hubei Province, Hefei in Anhui Province and Nanjing in Jiangsu Province, have led the transactions, with each of their land-sales revenues exceeding 2 billion yuan.

Nanjing last month sold a plot to state-owned China Merchants Land for 9.8 billion yuan, setting a new record for the city.

“Property developers’ enthusiasm for land-buying is still high,” said Yan Yuejin, research director at the Shanghai-based E-house China R&D Institute.

Yan said each land auction has attracted at least five bidders even though the government recently restricted developers to using cash-on-hand to buy plots.

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