The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Real estate gloomy in April as Covid weighs more on industry

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Home prices in 70 designated cities in China reported slower or negative growth in April from a year ago.

However, industrial experts believe market stability remains achievable in the coming months as the current Covid-19 resurgence is being effectivel­y contained and policies aimed at supporting rational demand will gradually take effect.

Out of the 70 major Chinese cities tracked by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), 47 cities saw new home prices decline monthon-month in April, nine more than that in March, and the number of cities reporting year-on-year price declines increased from 10 to 39, said Sheng Guoqing, chief statistici­an with the NBS urban division.

The four top-tier cities have shown more resilience in the housing market with average new home prices rising 0.2% from the previous month, though 0.1 percentage point less than that of March, according to data from the NBS.

Compared to a year ago, the four benchmark cities’ new home prices grew 3.9%, 0.4 percentage point lower than that of March.

The 31 second-tier cities tracked by the NBS reported a dip of 0.1% on average in new home prices in April, but up 1% from a year ago. For 35 third-tier cities, new home prices slipped 0.6% month-on-month and 1.5% yearon-year.

“Based on the NBS data, new home prices in the 70 major Chinese cities retreated 0.3% month-on-month and fell 0.1% year-on-year.

“And this was the first time since December 2015 for the year-on-year figure to fall,” Yan Yuejin, director of the Shanghai-based E-house China Research and Developmen­t Institutio­n.

This turning point suggested that the housing market is under considerab­le downward pressure, and various efforts in stabilisin­g housing prices and market expectatio­ns should be pushed forward at an accelerate­d pace, Yan added.

Chen Xiao, senior analyst with Zhuge Real Estate Data Research Centre, attributed the disrupted market recovery to the strict contagion prevention and control measures applied in many Chinese cities.

“The positive property policies announced recently by central and local government­s still need time to take effect and the road to a comprehens­ive recovery in the property market will be bumpy,” Chen said.

The pre-owned home market performed a similar curve as the new home sector.

There were 50 cities in which existing home prices declined month-on-month in April, five more than in March. And 56 cities recorded a decrease in prices year-on-year, nine more than that of a month earlier.

“Based on the NBS data, new home prices in the 70 major Chinese cities retreated 0.3% month-on-month and fell 0.1% year-on-year.”

Yan Yuejin

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