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China Real Estate Funds Crash as Economic Gloom Persists

Tumbling confidence sparked by the deepening property crisis and weakening consumption have seen a REITs index drop nearly 50% from an early 2022 peak


China new home prices fell in July, the results of a new survey revealed on Monday.
An excavator at a construction site of new residential buildings in Shanghai.

 

China’s real estate investment products have plummeted in value, with investors losing hope that China’s economy will stage a meaningful recovery any time soon.

Real estate investment trusts (REITs), which issue shares to investors against a portfolio of real estate holdings, have hit successive lows in the first few days of 2024.

After tumbling 28% in 2023, the CSI REITs Index has dropped another 6.4% this year through a rare, seven-day losing streak driven by one REITs manager’s disclosure of cuts in warehouse rental prices and broader fears of falling yields.

The selloff reflects tumbling confidence in an economy where a deepening property crisis, weakening consumption and sputtering business activities have sapped demand for office buildings, warehouses and shopping malls.

It also complicates Beijing’s efforts to lure investors into a nascent REIT market designed to channel badly needed cash to indebted local governments and property developers.

 

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“In an economic downtrend, it’s getting harder and harder for REITs to make money,” said Xia Chun, chief economist at Forthright Holdings Co.

Although REITs derive yields from relatively stable fee or rental incomes generated by underlying assets such as office towers or warehouses, Xia said REITs trade more like stocks than bonds, with big ups and downs, particularly in China.

After some initial excitement after its 2020 launch, China’s REIT market has witnessed an eye-watering bubble burst. The REITs index has nearly halved from its early 2022 peak.

Most of China’s 29 listed REITs are backed by infrastructure assets such as industrial parks, tollways and sewage treatment plants. Other REITs backed by shopping malls and supermarkets will be launched this month.

In the latest bout of relentless selling, REITs backed by logistics properties were among the biggest casualties.

The Harvest Jingdong Warehousing and Logistics REIT has tumbled roughly 30% this year, taking a hit after its January 4 disclosure that leasing fees at an underlying warehousing project in central Wuhan city had been cut by 13% in the new year.

CICC GLP Warehousing Logistics also plunged to record lows on fears it would be similarly affected.

 

Vacancy Woes

Investors also dumped REITs backed by industrial parks amid signs vacancy rates are soaring. Vacancy at retail properties climbed to 9.1% at the end of September, from less than 6% in 2019, according to CBRE, showing the lingering impact on consumption from the COVID pandemic.

The Hua An Zhangjiang Industrial Park REIT has plunged 24% this year. Only 61% of space at an office building in Shanghai was rented out at the end of 2023, down from 94% six months earlier, its asset manager disclosed, citing the loss of a key tenant.

Another REIT, CCB Principal Zhongguangcun Industrial Park, whose income is composed of office rents from tech start-ups in Beijing, has said government crackdowns on the internet sector and economic hardship had raised vacancy rates.

The meltdown has triggered a slew of stabilisation measures by REIT managers, including trading suspensions, increased transparency, and investments by underlying properties’ biggest owners.

Fu Lei, senior executive at Tebon Asset Management, said China’s REIT market is dominated by risk-averse institutional investors.

That means volatility “triggers a rush for the exit … which in turn magnifies mood swings and invites more volatility”, he told an online roadshow on Wednesday.

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Sean O’Meara

 

Read more:

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China’s First Listed Rental REITs 100 Times Oversubscribed

State-Owned Developers Led China’s Real Estate Market in 2023

 

 

Sean O'Meara

Sean O'Meara is an Editor at Asia Financial. He has been a newspaper man for more than 30 years, working at local, regional and national titles in the UK as a writer, sub-editor, page designer and print editor. A football, cricket and rugby fan, he has a particular interest in sports finance.