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26 April 2024

Increase in office space in China to push rents down

Published
By Agencies

Shanghai office rents, which fell in 2008 for the first time in eight years, are expected to decline further this year as almost 10 million square feet of new property comes onto the market.

The city's market for office space is expected to see a continued rise of market vacancy from 10.5 per cent at the end of 2008 and the rents to trend further southward, according to a report by real-estate consultants CB Richard Ellis distributed yesterday.

Average office rents in Shanghai fell 0.4 per cent last year to yuan 241.8 ($35.37 /Dh130) per square metre a month, the report said.

China's richest city added 930,707sqm of office space last year and will introduce another 870,000sqm this year, creating a glut of supply just as the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression erodes spending by companies, said CB Richard Ellis. Shanghai's government expects economic growth of nine per cent in 2009, compared with a pace of 13.3 per cent in 2007.

This year will likely "remain a buyers' market" in Shanghai, the report said.

Total investment in Shanghai real estate fell 25.8 per cent last year to yuan 14.6bn, according to the report. That annual decline was the result of a 67-per cent decline in investment during the second half of 2008, after first half spending rose 25 per cent from a year earlier, it said.

Rents for industrial and shipping facilities fell 3.1 per cent in the fourth quarter from the third to an average of 36 yuan per month per sqm, the report said. They rose 4.9 per cent for the whole of 2008, it said. Factory rents, including in the industrial and shipping category of properties, fell in both the third and fourth quarters, CB Richard Ellis said without giving figures.

Retail space rents in Shanghai rose at a slower pace last year than in 2007, gaining 7.6 per cent compared with a pace of 9.1 per cent a year earlier, it said.

Rents in the luxury residential market also fell, with prices for serviced apartments declining 5.7 per cent, apartments down 3.2 per cent and villas sliding 4.3 per cent. Luxury apartments and villas sold last year fell 59 per cent from a year earlier, CB Richard Ellis said.

Fewer transactions didn't stop the price of luxury homes from rising. The average price of luxury apartments increased 6.1 per cent last year, while villa prices rose 6.8 per cent, the report said.