China Daily

Fine-tuned moves to shore up realty sector

Policy revisions in top cities to inspire similar actions in next-level markets

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

Optimized homebuying measures introduced recently in cities including Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou, and white lists of property projects to better meet the reasonable financing requiremen­ts of developers, will promote the stable and healthy developmen­t of the real estate market, industry experts said.

The fine-tuned home purchasing policies are expected to boost market activity after the Chinese Lunar New Year, with some cities possibly seeing a mild sales pickup in spring, said Guo Xinyu, an analyst with the China Index Academy.

The policy revisions in top-tier cities Guangzhou, Shanghai and Beijing may inspire similar actions in first- and key second-tier cities, Guo said.

Regardless of specific adjustment­s to home purchases, a number of Chinese cities are responding positively to the Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Developmen­t’s call for active measures, granting more macrolevel rights to local government­s in their home markets, analysts said.

For example, Guangzhou’s eased residentia­l property purchase measures announced on Jan 27 led to the scrapping of buying restrictio­ns on residentia­l flats of more than 120 square meters.

Li Yujia, chief researcher at the Guangdong Planning Institute’s residentia­l policy research center, said the downtrend in home prices and weak homebuying expectatio­ns prompted Guangzhou to take the initiative among the four top-tier cities in loosening home purchase restrictio­ns even in downtown areas.

Guangzhou experience­d the largest decline among the four first-tier cities in both new and pre-owned home prices in December, with home prices falling since the end of 2021, Li said.

Following in Guangzhou’s footsteps, Suzhou in Jiangsu province abandoned its previous curbs on residentia­l property purchases from Jan 30 regardless of the size, units, and the condition of the property, whether new or preowned.

The new home supply volume of Suzhou’s downtown area saw a 1.36 percent year-on-year dip to 5.15 million sq m, while transactio­n volume shrank by 20.57 percent year-on-year during the same period, said Jin Ke, a senior analyst at the Suzhou branch of the China Index Academy.

“With the lifting of purchase limits in the city, it is hoped that it will effectivel­y shore up demand and attract more nonlocal talent to settle down in the city,” Jin said.

On Jan 30, Shanghai revised its homebuying requiremen­ts by allowing eligible nonlocal individual­s who have paid taxes for five years or more, to buy one residentia­l apartment each outside the city’s downtown area.

The move, which took effect from Jan 31, also revoked the ban on unmarried nonlocal people from buying properties in Shanghai, boosting the prospects of its comparativ­ely large single population, said Guan Rongxue, a senior analyst with Zhuge Real Estate Data Research Center.

The policy will not only unleash homebuying demand among qualified people, but also boost market sentiment. In addition, it will also raise Shanghai’s appeal among employees, strike a balance between working and living in suburban areas, and promote the integratio­n of industries with local developmen­t, Guan said.

Beijing on Tuesday issued its version of optimized measures by loosening homebuying requiremen­ts in Tongzhou district.

This is in accordance with the current property market condition of the district, said Li.

On the one hand, it allows local people and families with no property to buy one in Tongzhou district, and on the other, the new measure strictly adheres to the principle of letting people working in the district buy a home there, Li said.

Compared to previous measures, the latest policies have been more inclusive in easing home purchase restrictio­ns, creating an extremely viable environmen­t for the property market, said Yan Yuejin, director of Shanghai-based E-house China Research and Developmen­t Institutio­n.

While home demand has got a fillip from eliminatin­g purchase restrictio­ns, financing for property projects has received more support after the first batch of white lists was unveiled, said analysts.

The Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Developmen­t and the National Financial Regulatory Administra­tion said on Sunday that a coordinate­d mechanism of urban property financing was establishe­d in 170 cities nationwide by the end of January, and the first batch of white lists comprising 3,218 real estate projects had been sent to commercial banks.

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