Global Times

Real estate activity posts rebound

cities havin curbs imposed by Data show buying desired effect

- By Zhang Hongpei and Wang Cong

China’s property sector saw a strong rebound in investment in the first two months of the year, as land supply increased and real estate sales further surged, according to official data released on Tuesday. These developmen­ts, which came after many local government­s have acted to curb property prices, show that the restrictio­ns have had an effect and improve the prospects for further curbing prices, experts noted. Real estate investment rose 8.9 percent yearon- year in the first two months of 2017 to 985.4 billion yuan ($ 142.54 billion), data from the National Bureau of Statistics ( NBS) showed. The pace represents a fast rebound compared with 6.9 percent growth in all of 2016. Wang Baobin, a statistici­an with the NBS, attributed the surge to continuous positive momentum in sales, particular­ly in third- and fourthtier cities that are pursuing “destocking measures.”

Sales by area rose 25.1 percent year- on- year, up 2.6 percentage points from the pace in the full year of 2016, the NBS data showed. Sales in central and western regions, where most cities faced oversupply, rose more than 33 percent, according to the NBS.

The surge in these smaller cities may explain the rapid national growth in the face of buying curbs, according to Yan Yuejin, research director at the Shanghai- based E- house China R& D Institute.

“In third- and fourth- tier cities, due to the effectiven­ess of the destocking strategies, overall sales saw fast growth and lifted the national market,” Yan said in a note sent to the Global Times on Tuesday.

Last year, rising prices prompted the first- tier cities ( Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenzhen in South China Guangdong Province), as well as dozens of other cities, to introduce buying curbs.

Among 15 of those cities, 11 saw house prices slide, three saw unchanged prices and one recorded a slower pace of growth, Sheng Laiyun, spokesman of the NBS, said at a press conference in Beijing on Tuesday.

Land purchases for real estate developmen­t might have also contribute­d to the surge in investment, experts s noted.

By area, landd purchased by developers increaseda­sed 6.2 percent year- on- year, compared pared with a 3.4 percent decline forr the full year of 2016, according too the NBS.

As part of the its efffffffff­ffffffffff­fffffffort­s efforts to maintain stability in the housing market, the central government started in the second nd half of last year to ease restrictio­ns trictions on land supply.

The increase in real estate investment “alsoso indicates that land acquiredqu­ired last year has gone into the constructi­on phrase,” ase,” Wang said in a statementm­ent on the NBS websitee on Tuesday.

Real estate investment­ment will grow steadily and support stable economic developmen­t, Sheng said.

The trend will con-

tinue despite some fluctuatio­ns in the data of February, which achieved one of the goals of regulation in the real estate sector, he added.

Yan also said the surge in investment set the stage for falling inventory in third- and fourth- tier cities as well as curbing overheatin­g prices in first- and d second- tier cities.

“There will be a large number of real estate transactio­ns this year, but if prices keep rising, the possibilit­y of tightened measures in thirdand fourth- tier cities can’t be ruled out,” he added.

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 ?? Photo: CFP ?? Rows of new homes in Haikou, South China’s Hainan Province in March 2017
Photo: CFP Rows of new homes in Haikou, South China’s Hainan Province in March 2017

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