China Daily

Home prices in key cities continue to drop

- By WU YIYAO in Shanghai wuyiyao@chinadaily.com.cn

House prices in key cities including the capital are continuing on their way down — a trend that has been observed for the first time over several quarters — as a result of tightened policy controls, according to a new report released by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

The report said prices in Beijing in May fell 4.09 percent against April and cities neighborin­g the capital also retreated in price. In Tianjin, home prices in May were down 1.97 percent month-onmonth and in Lang fang, Hebei province, which borders Beijing, prices dropped 8 percent.

The report said that Shenzhen, Suzhou, Hefei and Zhengzhou — which experience­d double-digit home price growth in past months — saw their prices lower or with little change last month.

The new policies that curbed speculatio­n in residentia­l property markets have included tightened financing and transactio­n regulation­s over properties with good education resources, also known as xuequfang, literally meaning the “properties in areas with good schools”.

In Beijing, home prices in Xicheng and Haidian districts, two regions with clusters of good primary and middle schools, had “sharper decreases than other districts” in May due to the new policies.

Housing authoritie­s in key cities across China — including Shanghai, Beijing, Guangzhou, Shenzhen and cities with fast house price growth such as Hefei, Zhenzhou and Wuhan — have introduced a slew of measures to

a source in the retail banking sector

fight speculativ­e buying in the residentia­l property market.

These include requiring higher down payments, an increasing lending rate for home loans, and tougher purchase restrictio­ns. They have been rolled out in order to rein in highflying home prices and quash potential asset bubbles.

The report said the market boom has also been cooled by relatively tightened liquidity conditions, as China moved to deleverage the financial sector.

In Shanghai and Beijing, homebuyers have reported waiting for half a year since applying for home loans for their second home, without gaining approval.

“In Shanghai a handful of commercial banks have suspended lending to homebuyers, particular­ly those who are applying for financing their second homes. Lenders have strengthen­ed their scrutiny of loan applicants abilities to pay their debts, as they tight en risk management,” a source in the retail banking sector told China Daily.

“This move is also in alignment with policy makers’ decision to do battle with speculatio­n ,” the source added.

Analysts said on Tuesday that tightened lending had immediate effect on transactio­ns and without liquidity speculativ­e demand had been taken out of the market.

According to Yan Yuejin, research director of E-House China R&D Institute, tightened lending was to date the most “powerful” tool to curb speculatio­n, and it was likely that more cities would use financing tools to rule speculator­s out of the residentia­l property market.

More home purchase restrictio­ns and the tightened monetary environmen­t will weigh on market demand in the short term, said the CASS report, which predicted prices in previously red-hot markets like Beijing would continue their downward movement.

However, in the long term, limited land would restrict housing supplies in big cities and threaten to push home prices higher, the report added.

In Shanghai a handful of commercial banks have suspended lending to homebuyers, particular­ly those who are applying for financing their second homes. Lenders have strengthen­ed their scrutiny of loan applicants abilities to pay their debts, as they tighten risk management.”

Xinhua contribute­d to this story.

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