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Saturday, August 31, 2024

Chinese Commercial Real Estate

Not sure why I am posting this. I mean, who cares if the Chinese Commercial Real Estate (CRE) market is in free fall? The CRE market here at home is not in such great shape itself. Guess I'm just trying to keep tabs on fast the world is sliding towards the abyss. There are always ups and downs, but these days the news just seems to be consistently bad, which I translate to meaning that the slide has gotten steeper and faster. Will something happen to pull us out of this ever worsening recession / depression? Or are we really going to go into free fall? 

Anyway, I thought the opening to this story was pretty good. It goes on for a while and if you are really into what's going on in the Chinese economy you might want to read it.

Chinese Offices Emptier Now Than During Peak Of Covid Lockdowns As Economy Crumbles
 BY TYLER DURDEN FRIDAY, AUG 30, 2024 - 08:30 PM 

One week ago, we reported that China had found itself "On The Verge" of collapse as its "Welfare State Crumbles, Explosion In Social Unrest As Youth Unemployment Soars, Strikes Surge." All of this was the result of Beijing's very deliberate - and extremely risky - decision to not engage in a massive stimulus this time, unlike every previous occasion of sharp economist slowdown, and risk social unrest at best, or a full-blown revolution as an unthinkable worst case. 

Here is the silver lining: all those revolutionaries will have brand new empty offices at their disposal when they finally take over. That's because as the FT reports, offices in China’s biggest cities are emptier than they were during stringent Covid-19 lockdowns in what is the latest clear sign of how the country’s economic slowdown has crushed business confidence. 

At least a fifth of high-end office space was vacant in the tech hub of Shenzhen in June, according to data from three real estate agencies, while office vacancy rates in Beijing, Guangzhou and Shanghai were also higher than in June 2022. Naturally, with demand collapsing, rents are at least 10% lower than they were two years ago and in many cases much lower. 

While a rise of flexible working has made it hard for developers to fill office space in cities such as London and San Francisco, and led to an unprecedented commercial real estate crisis, in Chinese cities - where far fewer people work from home - analysts said there is a much simpler cause for explosion in office vacancies: the collapsing economy.... which is amusing considering the centrally-planned central government has set a full-year economic growth target of about 5%. The reality is that China's economy is shrinking at that rate, if not much faster.

 

1 comment:

  1. It's important because in China's "free market" real estate, like all segments of their "free market" economy, nothing happens without the blessing and for the benefit of the Central Committee. This situation shows the world, and more importantly the Chinese citizens, the man behind the curtain is fallible.
    In turn, Central Committee moves that sound questionable to some Chinese will bring things like this to mind, reinforcing their doubt.
    Of course the people can't do anything about it... yet.
    xoxoxoBruce

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