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Recently, the competition rate for apartment subscriptions in the metropolitan area has soared horribly, showing overheating.

There were some places that exceeded 1,800 to 1, and the expectation that if you win, you can get a profit of hundreds of millions of won in market prices.



This is reporter Jeong Seong-jin.



<Reporter> On



the 3rd, 470,000 people flocked to the general supply of 1,000 households in three apartment complexes sold in the knowledge and information town of Gwacheon-si, Gyeonggi-do.



The average competition rate of 400~500:1, and the highest competition rate exceeded 1,800:1.



[Son Mi-soon/ Gwacheon City, Gyeonggi-do: (Nearby) 1.9 billion, 1.8 billion, 2 billion 30 pyeong.

Since the sale price is in the late 800 million units, it is almost twice as effective, so it is called a'lotto' subscription...

.] The



average competition rate exceeded 400:1 with 110,000 people flocking to the subscription of 280-family apartments in Gamil District, Hanam.



It is a natural result that a large number of people are crowded as the pre-sale price cap is applied, which is hundreds of millions of won lower than the surrounding market price.



As existing house prices have risen a lot and it is difficult to borrow money due to loan regulations, demand for my house is concentrated in the subscription market.



[Mr. Jung/Newlyweds in their 30s: It's very difficult to buy a house with a regular salary.

Once the subscription is inexpensive, you can easily make money if you can.]



If the expectation that the house price will fall is not spreading, the purpose of the pre-sale price limit of stabilizing the surrounding house price disappears and only stimulates the perception of'lotto'.



[Jaeman Lim/Professor, Department of Real Estate, Sejong University: Because some enjoy huge market margins and others have no such thing at all.

This is because the pre-sale market is made into a speculative field.] The



demand for'lottery' subscriptions remains in the jeonse market for the status of homeless, inevitably stimulating the price of jeonse.



[Kim Jin-yu/Professor of Department of Urban Transportation Engineering, Gyeonggi University: (Subscription applicants) Most of them are victims.

It was too difficult to find a rented house, and the price was too high to buy (the house), so this has no choice but to go to the pre-sale market.]



Some point out that it is necessary to review the subscription system, just as Pangyo's previous mid- to large-sized market price margins were redeemed with bond bidding. There is.



(Video coverage: Park Seung-won and Yoo Dong-hyuk, video editing: So Ji-hye)