China Daily

Home prices slightly higher

Cooling measures to play a bigger role in stabilizin­g property market

- By WANG YING in Shanghai wang_ying@chinadaily.com.cn

Home prices in major Chinese cities saw mild year-on-year growth in February and experts expect the tightening measures to play a bigger role in cooling home prices and stabilizin­g the property market.

Prices of new homes in the 70 cities tracked by the National Bureau of Statistics rose by 0.36 percent on a monthly basis in February, compared with the 0.28 percent gain in January. On a yearly basis, prices grew by 4.06 percent last month.

Out of the 70 cities, 56 cities saw price growth in February, three more than in January. Two cities reported no change, and 12 recorded a decrease in prices.

“Although home prices in various Chinese cities performed quite differentl­y on a monthly basis, all the cities saw a mild growth in year-onyear terms,” said Sheng Guoqing, chief statistici­an with the NBS.

Despite the lower base of last year, when the real estate sector in the country was battered due to the novel coronaviru­s epidemic, the industry is witnessing robust demand due to the country’s fasterthan-expected economic recovery.

New home prices in the four toptier cities rose by 0.5 percent on a monthly basis, with Guangzhou seeing the maximum gain of 0.9 percent, followed by Beijing with 0.7 percent, Shanghai at 0.5 percent, and Shenzhen at 0.1 percent.

Unlike a year ago, the four major cities saw a 4.8 percent growth in new home prices, up 0.6 percentage point from that of the previous month, according to the NBS.

First-tier cities outperform­ed smaller cities in terms of new home price growth. Prices in the 31 secondtier cities monitored by the NBS rose by 0.4 percent on a monthly basis, and by 4.5 percent on a yearly basis, while the figures were 0.3 percent and 3.6 percent respective­ly for the 35 third-tier cities.

“With millions of people deciding to stay put during the Spring Festival holiday, the home market became very active in major Chinese cities, leading to price increases,” said Xu Xiaole, chief market analyst with the Beike Research Institute.

In the pre-owned home market, first-tier cities again took the lead in price gains. Fifty-five of the 70 cities reported price growths, six more than in January.

Compared with January, the toptier cities saw a 1.1 percent gain in existing home trading. Specifical­ly, Shanghai reported the largest month-on-month increase of 1.3 percent in transactio­n prices among the top four cities, followed by Beijing with 1.2 percent, Guangzhou with 1 percent, and Shenzhen with 0.9 percent. The four cities witnessed a 10.8 percent growth on a yearly basis in existing home prices.

Used home prices in the 31 second-tier cities rose by 0.4 percent from a month ago, and by 2.9 percent on a yearly basis.

The 35 third-tier cities saw their existing home prices rise by 0.2 percent from the previous month, and an increase of 1.9 percent from the same period a year ago.

“Quite a few cities have fine-tuned their home purchase measures recently, which effectivel­y helped stabilize home prices. Home price stability would remain as the focus of the residentia­l market,” said Yan Yuejin, director of the Shanghaiba­sed E-house China Research and Developmen­t Institutio­n.

“In Shenzhen and Shanghai, new tightening policies released recently are expected to cool down the local home markets. We believe that more cities will announce their own cooling measures as the convention­al warm-up season is approachin­g,” said Zhang Dawei, chief analyst at Centaline Property Agency Ltd.

This year may prove challengin­g for the real estate developers due to the economic headwinds, and financial de-risking may become a renewed focus, according to Savills China research.

 ?? XU JINGBAI / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Workers carry out constructi­on at a property project site in Nantong, Jiangsu province.
XU JINGBAI / FOR CHINA DAILY Workers carry out constructi­on at a property project site in Nantong, Jiangsu province.

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