In
November, the value of land sales nationwide sank 9.90% from a
year earlier, although that was less than the 13.14% annual
decline in October, according to Reuters calculations based on
finance ministry data.
Beijing's efforts to reduce leverage across the sector,
including limits on how much developers can borrow, have
resulted in a financial crunch among real estate firms including
China Evergrande Group this year.
The appetite of cash-strapped private developers has been
lacklustre at urban land auctions as a result, pressuring local
governments to scramble for other income to fund investment and
support the economy.
In the second round of land auctions this year at 22 major
cities that ended in November, private developers bought at
least 140.6 billion yuan of land, down from 553.1 billion yuan
in the first round in March-June, according to a Reuters
analysis of public notices on the sales.
Official data on Wednesday showed China's property suffered more
headwinds in November, with home prices, sales, investment and
construction mired in negative territory, weighed by weak demand
and the cash crunch among developers.
($1 = 6.3726 Chinese yuan)
(Reporting by Ryan Woo and Liangping Gao; Editing by Himani
Sarkar, Kirsten Donovan)
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