Sales Climb to Industry Fourth, Cmacol's Underlying Logic Is Shifting

When the industry no longer rewards scale, profit fluctuations become a process of “squeezing out water.” The true turning point begins with whether companies can sustainably create value.

During the deep adjustment cycle of the real estate sector, China Merchants Shekou (001979.SZ) delivered a clear performance report. By 2025, the company achieved operating revenue of 154.728 billion yuan and net profit attributable to shareholders of 1.024 billion yuan. Despite industry pressure, China Merchants Shekou maintained profitability and emphasized cash flow safety and stable operations. More profound changes lie in the shift of development logic.

China Merchants Shekou believes that the core competitive landscape of the real estate industry has shifted from the past “scale is king” extensive growth to high-quality development centered on products, services, and operational capabilities. The key to competition is also transitioning from resource dependence and debt-driven strategies to refined management, product delivery, and organizational resilience.

Based on this judgment, China Merchants Shekou clearly proposed during the “14th Five-Year Plan” period the path of “optimizing development, strengthening operations, expanding services, and improving risk management,” transforming from a traditional developer to a “developer + operator + service provider,” aiming to build a more sustainable value creation system.

In a sense, this financial report is not just a performance disclosure but also a self-calibration at an industry inflection point by a leading real estate enterprise: after the scale downturn, those who can navigate the cycle with more stable financial strength, more reliable delivery capabilities, and verifiable product quality are more likely to gain an advantage in the next round of competition.

China Merchants Shekou 2025 Annual Performance Briefing held in Shenzhen

Fourth in sales ranking, focusing on core city strategic fulfillment

Against the backdrop of continued policy tightening, the overall Chinese real estate market in 2025 remains in a phase of adjustment and bottoming out.

Housing transaction area in 30 key cities nationwide is about 326 million square meters, down 7% year-on-year, with new home transactions down 18%, while second-hand home transactions are roughly flat, further increasing their share to about 65%. Changes in market structure indicate the retreat of the era of incremental development and the reshaping of industry logic through stock and structural opportunities.

In this context, China Merchants Shekou still maintained relatively steady sales performance.

In 2025, the company achieved a total contracted sales area of 7.1612 million square meters and contracted sales of 196.009 billion yuan, ranking fourth in the industry.

More valuable is its urban layout—ranking in the top three in full-caliber sales in 10 cities including Shanghai, Shenzhen, Chengdu, Xi’an, Changsha, Nanjing, Zhengzhou, Suzhou, Foshan, and Nantong. Among the 30 key cities nationwide, 15 entered the top five locally.

Behind this achievement is the company’s ongoing focus on the “core city” strategy, which has been gradually realized. Shanghai performed especially well, with full-caliber sales exceeding 50 billion yuan, returning to the top spot in the local market; Beijing achieved 19.3 billion yuan in full-caliber sales, entering the top five for the first time; Hangzhou reached the top four with 16.9 billion yuan, marking the best historical result for the company in that city, with a hard-won market share breakthrough against local competitors like Binjiang and Greentown. Meanwhile, Shenzhen’s sales exceeded 15 billion yuan, maintaining third place; Chengdu also surpassed 10 billion yuan, ranking fifth.

Corresponding to scale performance is the continuous strengthening of product power.

During the reporting period, over 20 new projects nationwide exceeded feasibility expectations in initial sales. Fifteen projects, including Kangding 19 in Shanghai, Chengdu Merchants Xihe, Chengdu Jincheng Xu, Changsha Merchants Xu, and Xi’an Wutong Academy, were listed among the top ten works of the year or half-year nationwide, helping the company rank fourth in “China Real Estate Companies Product Power TOP 100”; projects like Beijing Merchants Xihe and Foshan Huaxi Phase II entered the “Good Houses” TOP 20.

In terms of product system, China Merchants Shekou continues to upgrade product lines such as “Xihe, Xu, Lan Yue, Tian Qing,” and systematically constructs the “Good House” standard based on policy guidance. This system covers seven dimensions: “Worry-Free Living, Comfortable and Healthy, Green and Low-Carbon, Smart and Convenient, Exquisite Craftsmanship, Aesthetic Renewal, Thoughtful Service,” refined into 28 scenario modules and 485 technical details, with scaled implementation in over 20 benchmark projects nationwide.

As the industry shifts from scale expansion to high-quality development, China Merchants Shekou’s path is becoming clearer: anchoring in core cities, leveraging product strength, and transforming the “Good House” concept into replicable and deliverable products through standardized and systematic capabilities.

This capability is becoming a key pillar for its cycle navigation.

Strengthening investment discipline, transforming into a “development + operation + service” model

After four consecutive years of deep adjustment, the supply-demand relationship in China’s real estate market is showing marginal improvement. New construction area has been below sales area for four years in a row, with the new housing supply-demand ratio in 100 cities remaining below 1, indicating inventory clearance; meanwhile, rental yields in key cities are gradually rebounding, and asset pricing logic is transitioning from “increment-driven” to “return-driven.”

In this process, demand has not disappeared but shows more pronounced structural differentiation—high-tier cities still demonstrate strong resilience, with core residential demand in first-tier and some strong second-tier cities continuing.

Based on this judgment, China Merchants Shekou continues to adopt the strategy of “focusing on core, using sales to guide investment, and carefully selecting projects” at the investment end, further strengthening investment discipline.

In 2025, the company acquired 43 land parcels, totaling approximately 4.4 million square meters of gross floor area, with a total land price of about 93.8 billion yuan and equity land price of about 54.3 billion yuan, representing a year-on-year increase of 62%; corresponding new value of 125.7 billion yuan, up 85%. In terms of city structure, “Strong Heart 30 Cities” accounted for 100% of investments, “Core 10 Cities” nearly 90%, with first-tier cities accounting for 63%, indicating highly concentrated investment resources in core areas.

Regarding investment decision mechanisms, the company further introduced the “Six Good” review system, evaluating projects across six dimensions: city, team, sector, turnover, product, and operation, ensuring full-process screening and control to optimize resource allocation under controllable costs. Meanwhile, the company adheres to “sales-guided investment and production,” focusing on sales absorption and cash recovery to avoid ineffective expansion and ensure alignment with market rhythm.

By the end of 2025, China Merchants Shekou’s total undeveloped land bank was about 22 million square meters, with 47% in the “6+10” core cities, 76% in the “Strong Heart 30 Cities,” and 25% in the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area. In terms of property types, residential accounted for 64%, remaining the core support. The overall land reserve structure reflects a further focus on core cities and mainstream products.

It is also worth noting that the land market itself is changing.

Earlier this year, local governments began to release more core location land parcels, actively lowering starting floor prices, reducing plot ratios, and shrinking project sizes. By 2025, projects with floor ratios below 2.0 accounted for 43%, a historic low. These changes benefit companies by improving product quality and turnover efficiency but also intensify competition for quality land, with some projects experiencing significant premium increases.

Against this backdrop, China Merchants Shekou remains cautious about investments in 2026, continuing the “core city, precise investment” approach, paying more attention to project turnover speed and yield realization, emphasizing endogenous growth and high-quality expansion.

On the supply side, the company has prepared for the next phase.

On the sales side, it continues to adopt a cautious strategy. The company expects overall sales in 2026 to be roughly the same as 2025, emphasizing sales quality and cash collection over scale expansion, aiming for precise matching of supply pace and market windows across different cities.

Overall, the market is still in the “policy bottom has appeared, market bottom remains to be confirmed” stage. China Merchants Shekou maintains a short-term view of “boosting confidence” and a medium- to long-term outlook of “cautious optimism,” believing the industry will still undergo a period of bottoming and recovery.

In this context, China Merchants Shekou accelerates its transformation from a traditional developer to a “developer + operator + service provider,” with growth in holding-type businesses becoming a direct reflection of this strategy.

In 2025, the company’s managed properties generated revenue of 7.63 billion yuan, up 2.2% year-on-year; the company added 29 new projects with a total construction area of 1.77 million square meters, covering long-term rentals, commercial centers, and industrial parks. Additionally, the company increased light-asset management area by about 828,000 square meters, mainly in Shanghai, Hangzhou, Chengdu, and Shenzhen, with diversified business synergy gradually emerging.

Overall, China Merchants Shekou’s core competitiveness is becoming clearer. Relying on the long-term background of China Merchants Group, combined with clear and stable strategic execution, prudent financial management, and full-chain capabilities covering development, operation, and services, these strengths are not formed overnight and are difficult to replicate easily.

In an industry still in winter, this capability structure is becoming a fundamental support for steady progress.

View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Comment
Add a comment
Add a comment
No comments
  • Pin