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A group of leading domestic enterprises, who
have no real estate development experience, are actively striving
to enter the property market based on their robust capital
strength.
But experts and government officials said that
the trend may add further fuel to the current overheating housing
industry and the bold and speculative investment is risky.
Midea Group, a private household electrical
appliance producer, is busy preparing for the purchase of a large
property project in Guangdong Shunde.
Lenovo, one of China's top computer enterprises,
plans to further expand its real estate business, while, Huawei -
one of the country's leading telecom equipment providers - seeks
to take over the property segment of the 999 Enterprises Group,
sources closed to the two domestic conglomerates revealed.
Moreover, TCL, Skyworth and Shenzhen Electronics
Group Co Ltd (SEGCL) have bought mature lands for development.
In addition, China Grains and Oils Group
Corporation, Macro, Qingdao Truck, Guangzhou Liby and China
Eastern Airlines commenced their real estate businesses this year.
To date, some of the projects developed by the
non-housing enterprises are performing well.
However, insiders pointed out that the majority
of the non-real estate enterprises' prospects in the property
business are gloomy.
Li Rongrong, minister of the State-owned Assets
Supervision and Administration Commission, warned that large
commercial enterprises should not become blindly involved in
overheated sectors with high risks, such as the property industry,
on a meeting of central enterprises' leaders last December.
Insiders and experts say the large enterprises
are seeking to make up for a lack of funds in the
capital-intensive sector with speculation in a high-margin market.
The Chinese Government issued stricter banking
loan policies on the property industry last July and the higher
self-funded requirements on real estate projects were put forward
later. Those pent-off measures made it difficult for a large group
of real estate developers, especially medium and small-sized ones,
to acquire capital.
"The large enterprises groups find out that
they may gain more bargain space during the transaction with
capital-thirsty property developers," said Yin Zhongli of the
Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
(China Daily July 21, 2004 www.china.org.cn)
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