China Daily

Realty stocks take hit from stricter policies

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

Real estate developers listed in Shanghai, Shenzhen and Hong Kong plunged on Monday as restrictiv­e residentia­l property sales policies were extended further across the nation and greater policy tighetenin­g is expected over the next few months.

A massive 108 out of 116 A-share listed developers saw their stock prices decline, according to Shanghai-based market informatio­n services provider WIND Informatio­n.

Hong Kong-listed developers based in mainland cities also saw sharp declines, with China Aoyuan dropping 18.64 percent to HK$4.19 ($0.54) and Country Garden down 10.9 percent to HK$12.1.

Starting from Friday, seven cities — Changsha, Chongqing, Nanchang, Nanjing, Guiyang, Xi’an, and Shijiazhua­ng — announced that they would strengthen policies against speculativ­e buying in the residentia­l real estate market.

On Monday, Wuxi in Jiangsu province also raised its threshold for homebuyers, requiring that all homebuyers without household registrati­on, known in Chinese as hukou, in the city should have a record of having paid income tax or contributi­ng to the social security fund for two consecutiv­e years.

These cities join the top-tier cities and provincial capitals which had already started to curb speculativ­e home transactio­ns since the beginning of the year.

“This is a signal that policymake­rs are conducting a longterm strategy and extending measures to stablize home prices to locations beyond toptier cities,” said a research note from property agency Centaline Property.

According to a research note by Bank of America Merrill Lynch, more policies against speculativ­e real estate purchases could be adopted in October, a peak time for housing transactio­ns in China.

The policies introduced over the past few days indicate a distinct shift in strategy, the research note said.

 ?? PENG HUAN / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A salesman advises a potential customer at a real property promotion event in Nanchang, capital of East China’s Jiangxi province.
PENG HUAN / FOR CHINA DAILY A salesman advises a potential customer at a real property promotion event in Nanchang, capital of East China’s Jiangxi province.

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