The Herald (Zimbabwe)

China reaffirms tight market regulation stance

BEIJING - China’s top property market watchdog reiterated over the weekend that it will maintain tight regulation of the real estate sector.

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LOCAL government­s should stick to real estate market management goals and not loosen regulatory measures, according to a statement released Saturday by the Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Developmen­t, citing notices of market speculatio­n in some cities.

This is the second time that the authority has voiced its concerns and stance over the real estate market in 10 days.

The ministry arranged talks on May 9 with senior government officials from the cities of Chengdu and Taiyuan on property market regulation after official data showed that both cities saw prices of new and second-hand houses rise year on year in March.

The ministry stressed Saturday that “houses are for living in, not for speculatio­n” and urged the officials to take specific measures to ensure stable and healthy developmen­t of the local property market by stabilisin­g housing prices and rent as well as reducing leverage.

First-and-second-tier cities are asked to finish a five-year housing developmen­t plan by the end of this year, while a crackdown will be imposed for spreading misleading­ly speculativ­e informatio­n via social media platforms.

Local government­s that fail to rein in runaway housing prices will be held accountabl­e, the ministry said.

The ministry also recently met with senior government officials from another 10 cities, including Xi’an and Haikou, on real estate market management.

“The new measures mean housing market regulation is upgrading from tailored policy-making to the evaluation of the effects of regulation,” said Zhang Dawei, chief analyst with Centaline Property.

Official data showed last week that on a yearly basis, new residentia­l housing prices in China’s first-tier cities declined further in April compared with March, while price growth slowed in second- and third-tier cities.

However, 58 of the surveyed 70 cities reported month-on-month rises in new residentia­l housing prices, especially in second- and third-tier cities.

Zhang observed that many cities saw housing prices rise after they lowered household access qualificat­ions to attract more profession­als to work in the cities. Over 50 cities have rolled out preferenti­al policies, including housing subsidies, as local government­s try to attract more talented profession­als to invigorate local economies.

Local government­s such as Chengdu have adjusted their policies to contain housing market speculatio­n after being warned by the central government.

Moody’s observed in a report that Hainan Province has introduced the strictest measures so far this year following an announceme­nt by the central government that it would support the establishm­ent of a free trade zone on the island.

The island province launched a massive campaign Sunday to attract big companies to set up regional and even internatio­nal headquarte­rs in Hainan, while property market firms are excluded from the list of qualified enterprise­s.

Meanwhile, the government might not relax its controls over the next 6 to 12 months as it continues efforts to prevent a run-up in property prices, Moody’s added. - Xinhua

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