Last month @caocli and I set out to see what is going on in China’s property market. We knew things weren't great -- we had heard about protests, property sales plummeting and unsold apartments. But we were still pretty surprised at what we found
https://nyti.ms/2LDHzyJ
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We met Hu and Wang, two young real estate agents who moved to Jurong last year because they thought a property boom in Nanjing would spill over to Jurong. (here they are locking up their offices before taking us for a drive around town.)pic.twitter.com/uvYuBq82yr
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Instead the market has cooled and Jurong is stuck with hundreds of half built apartment buildings. One complex we drove past called Yudong International straddles several blocks and will have 120 buildings when it is done
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When we asked who was going to live in all these new apartments, Hu paused. "I was wondering that myself," he told uspic.twitter.com/qWdb01FNlw
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We left wondering if Jurong was an anomaly. Then we talked to some experts. One professor has been working on a study of unoccupied urban housing. He told us 65 million apartments sit unoccupied across China
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That has some people worried. One economist called the prospects for the market "grim” and warned that it is China's "biggest gray rhino"
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Hi Miss good
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