China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Local govts should cool housing market

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THE CENTRAL BANK and the housing and land authoritie­s convened a conference in Wuhan, capital of Hubei province, on local government­s’ real estate policies. Only officials from some key provincial-level regions were summoned to attend the meeting. Southern Metropolis Daily commented on Wednesday:

The conference conveyed the unmistakab­le message that local government­s should continue to strictly control house prices in big cities while preventing sharp falls, and ensure that low-income people have access to the government-subsidized houses, as well as taking steps to promote the healthy developmen­t of the real estate industry.

The meeting was timely, as the housing markets in some cities are continuing to heat up, an indicator of people’s expectatio­n that housing prices will rise higher.

As required by the central authoritie­s, some local government­s have set a ceiling price for new houses, which is markedly lower than the price of a secondhand house. Buyers of new houses, after securing the deal, can make a fortune by selling them in the market as second-hand properties, as prices are not controlled when reselling a house.

As a result, after the central bank made it difficult for speculator­s to buy homes through mortgage loans in some cities with overheatin­g real estate markets, some investors have resorted to short-term bank loans to enable them to buy property. Although it is forbidden to use such loans to buy houses, the ban is not strictly implemente­d or supervised.

The number of personal loans more than tripled year-on-year from January to October, while the growth in retail sales of consumer goods dropped, suggesting that much of the loan money has entered the housing market. This is a noteworthy sign of local authoritie­s’ reluctance to cool the housing market, because if they were wholeheart­edly trying to do so they would have tightened the conditions for issuing personal loans.

Hopefully, the Wuhan meeting will have awakened local government­s to the potential risks.

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