Hong Kong: China's large developers are tightening their hold on the country's real estate market, capturing an ever-larger share even as sales growth is expected to slow and worries about debt persist.
According to the US investment bank Citi, the top 10 China developers are forecast to achieve close to 35 per cent market share this year, up from around 27 per cent now. They held just 14.2 per cent of the market in 2012.
The number of developers posting more than 50 billion yuan in sales increased to 40 in 2017 from 25 in 2016, with sales growth of 53 per cent to 84 per cent, real estate developer CREIS said. The number of smaller developers, with sales between 10 billion and 50 billion yuan, fell to 104 from 106.
And although the total number of home transactions is expected to drop about 5 per cent, securities firms and rating agency analysts said Hong Kong-listed developers could see 30 per cent sales growth on average this year, compared with an average of 40 per cent growth in 2017.
But the growth will not be without risk. Ramped-up land purchases mean the developers will add debt, throwing uncertainty into the stated plans of some to deleverage.
China Evergrande and Sunac China had the highest gearing ratios at more than 200 per cent in the first half of last year. Both said in October they intended to reduce their debt ratio, but neither halted their buying sprees.
If there is a market correction, developers' liquidity will be tested. But Standard & Poor director Christopher Yip said even in that scenario, he didn't see a large impact.
"We don't think there'll be a big probability for rated developers to be unable to repay their debt other than very weak ones with poor liquidity and refinancing prospects; others should have secured the financing before they buy land," Yip said.
Several major developers told Reuters that they were confident in double-digit sales growth this year. The companies could not be identified as the information is not yet public.
"Last year we sold so many flats, we'll need to replenish; our land acquisition budget has to be larger than last year because our size is also larger," said a senior executive of a Shanghai-based developer, who declined to be identified as he was not authorised to speak to the media.
A softening but still resilient property market, underpinned by steady prices, would be welcome news for both China's policymakers and developers. Beijing is eager to keep the market stable as the government tackles an alarming build-up in debt.
Many investors are overlooking debt risks and focusing more on revenue, as evidenced by surging share prices.
China property stocks were among the best performers in Hong Kong in 2017, propelled by robust sales, with Evergrande up 480 per cent, Sunac jumping 460 per cent, and Country Garden climbing 270 per cent. Nine other developers saw shares surge more than two-fold.
Some analysts questioned whether the expansion rate of China's largest developers could be sustained.
"China's property shares rallied in 2017 thanks to top-line growth, but this momentum will slow in 2018. The growth story this year will be weaker," said CLSA analyst Nicole Wong. "Last year, many sales were from smaller cities, but as liquidity tightens, sales to these cities will be more difficult."
The price to earnings ratio of the China property sector rebounded last year after the share rally, but it was still at relatively low levels.
Buying spree
The larger developers, despite sounding notes of caution, have continued to aggressively pursue growth.
According to data by property researcher CREIS, Evergrande bought a total gross floor area of 16.2 million square metres in the second half of 2017, compared to 9.7 million in the first six months, via both public land auction and mergers and acquisitions. Sunac bought 520,000 square metres in the second half, a slowdown from 1.4 million from January to June.
Country Garden, China Vanke and Evergrande breached the 500 billion yuan ($76.93 billion) mark for annual sales for the first time in 2017, according to CREIS.
Top-performing developers spent 40 to 50 per cent of their sales revenue on land acquisitions last year, CREIS said, much higher than smaller rivals, which spent 27-36 per cent of sales revenue.
While big companies splurged 74 per cent more on land purchases than the previous year, a bigger percentage rise went to smaller cities as tightening policies took hold elsewhere.
China has imposed measures to crack down on property speculation since early 2016, and China's home price growth is likely to stall in 2018 as the boom in smaller cities is expected to lose steam, while measures to tighten credit and other property curbs constrain the market, a Reuters poll showed.