As the last first-tier city that insists on publishing house price data in time, Shenzhen's house price data has quietly not been updated in March.
According to the Shenzhen real estate information platform, up to now, the second-hand housing price data in the city has not been updated for three consecutive months, and the last update stayed on April 24. At that time, the average transaction price of single-day first-hand houses was 52 104 yuan/square meter.
It is understood that after the institutional reform in Shenzhen in April this year, the entrance of Shenzhen real estate information platform was changed from official website, the former Shenzhen Land and Resources Planning Bureau, to official website and Shenzhen Housing and Construction Bureau. Since then, the platform will no longer publish the average transaction price and total transaction amount of new houses, as well as specific information such as average transaction price and total transaction amount classified by apartment type and area interval.
In this regard, the Shenzhen Housing and Construction Bureau said that due to the limited scale of the Shenzhen real estate market, the transaction price level is easily affected by the structure. In order to more accurately reflect the operation of the real estate market, Shenzhen, referring to the practice of other cities, will no longer publish the summary transaction amount and average price information on the basis of publicizing the "one room, one price" price of real estate pre-sale projects.
Ding Song, director of the Tourism and Real Estate Research Center of China Comprehensive Development Research Institute, expressed support for this approach. He pointed out that Shenzhen is a city with a serious shortage of land. The annual housing supply is not particularly large, but it is often particularly affected by the structure. If there are more foreign sales now, the overall average price will be low; There will be a large turnover in Nanshan next week, and the price will go up immediately. This kind of ups and downs can not truly reflect the property prices in Shenzhen, but may mislead the public.