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REPEAT: China's First Rental Housing REIT: Model For Future?
Repeats Story Initially Transmitted at 09:59 GMT Oct 24/05:59 EST Oct 24
BEIJING (MNI) - The Chinese government has approved the nation's first-ever
real estate investment trust (REIT) amid its campaign to boost the domestic
rental housing market, China media reported.
The government approved the plan Monday during the 19th Communist Party
National Congress. The CNY5 billion REIT will be managed by the rental housing
division of listed property developer Poly Real Estate Group, a central
state-owned enterprise (SOE). The approval was hailed by Beijing Business Today
as "meaning securitization of the rental housing market has entered a new
chapter" by allowing individual and institutional investors to participate
indirectly in the domestic property market of the world's second-largest
economy.
"From a macroeconomic viewpoint, such pilot programs lay the foundation for
the government to create product standards for REITs and related products," Yan
Yuejin, director of the research department at E-house Real Estate Research
Institute, said in an interview with MNI on Tuesday.
REITs -- real estate-focused investment vehicles similar to mutual funds --
gather investment capital from individual investors and financial institutions
to invest in a variety of real estate projects. The investors receive returns
based on the net profits generated by the trust investments.
China has never had a true REIT due to the lack of an approved investment
fund framework and underdevelopment of the connection between the real estate
and capital markets, although China has experimented with so-called quasi-REITs
-- trusts that do not meet all the standards of the Western version of the
investment vehicle -- for a number of years. Rental housing development
companies are eager for new funding channels, and individual investors want new
investment vehicles in which to place the money they have accumulated from
China's economic boom over the past several decades.
"This kind of financial product will help money to get to property
developers faster, especially in the rental housing market," Yan told MNI.
Property companies still have many concerns about investing in the rental
housing market, even with the government's encouragement, because returns are
not high and cash flows usually take much longer than with housing sales, he
said.
The first rental housing fund was approved on Oct. 11, but with little
reaction. That is partly because the fund was a quasi-REIT managed by a private
property company focused on long-term rentals, while Poly is a large, well-known
state-backed property developer listed on the Shanghai stock market.
The Chinese government has signaled in the past few months that state-owned
companies would lead its high-priority campaign to significantly increase rental
housing in coming years.
The Poly REIT model "represents an example for large-scale Chinese property
companies on how to best utilize the assets they own," Che Yang, an expert on
REITs who works for a private equity fund, told MNI. "It means all property
companies could soon establish such investment trusts."
However, Che argued that the Poly REIT product may not be a true REIT by
Western standards.
"We cannot say it's a real REIT because real REITs can be publicly funded"
while the Poly REIT cannot, Che told MNI. "It's almost the same as a
quasi-REIT."
Che said establishing REITs as funding vehicles is the clear direction of
the real estate market. Both government policy guidance and the market are
pushing toward creating true REITs, he said, noting property developers now
often talk about REITs in discussions with each other.
Yan said REITs may help reduce speculation in the property sector, as
individuals could invest in property projects via REITs rather than purchase
housing units directly to hedge against price gains in the future. Che agreed
REITS could contribute to reducing speculation to some extent but noted that
REIT purchasers may mainly be banks that invest via off-balance-sheet methods,
so REITs may not do much to control risk in the real estate or financial
sectors.
Analysts expect the Chinese government to set out guidelines for creating
true REITs by the end of this year or early next year.
--MNI Beijing Bureau; +86 (10) 8532-5998; email: iris.ouyang@marketnews.com
--MNI BEIJING Bureau; +1 202-371-2121; email: john.carter@mni-news.com
--MNI Beijing Bureau; +86 (10) 8532-5998; email: vince.morkri@marketnews.com
To read the full story
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Why MNI
MNI is the leading provider
of intelligence and analysis on the Global Fixed Income, Foreign Exchange and Energy markets. We use an innovative combination of real-time analysis, deep fundamental research and journalism to provide unique and actionable insights for traders and investors. Our "All signal, no noise" approach drives an intelligence service that is succinct and timely, which is highly regarded by our time constrained client base.Our Head Office is in London with offices in Chicago, Washington and Beijing, as well as an on the ground presence in other major financial centres across the world.