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No stopping China property market as small cities set record

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SHANGHAI: There’s no stopping China’s property market.

New-home prices rose at the fastest price in 22 months in July, climbing 1.2% from the previous month.

That’s according to Bloomberg calculatio­ns based on statistics bureau data for 70 cities released yesterday. It was the fifth straight monthly accelerati­on.

The jump in values in third-tier cities was the biggest in data going back to 2009, signalling the potential for the government to roll out more housing curbs in a cooling campaign that began more than two years ago.

The dilemma for officials is how to restrain prices without tanking the property sector during a broader economic slowdown.

“A persistent­ly high home price is going to lead to a very strong response from the government,” Phillip Zhong, a Hong Kong-based equity analyst at Morningsta­r Investment Management Asia, said on Bloomberg Television. “We are going to expect to see more tightening measures being put in place.”

Values climbed 1.2% in third-tier cities, calculatio­ns showed, despite the potential blow to demand from authoritie­s tightening loan approvals for shanty-town redevelopm­ents.

The gain was 1.4% for second-tier cities. Those increases compared with just 0.3% in the biggest cities of Beijing, Shanghai, Shenzhen and Guangzhou.

“The pent-up demand is too strong to be fully curbed,” Yang Kewei, Shanghai-based research director at China Real Estate Informatio­n Corp, said before the release. “It’s entirely possible that later this year prices may surge again.”

The latest gain across the 70 cities compared with a 1.1% increase in June. Newhome values, excluding government-subsidised housing, rose in 65 cities, compared with 63 in June.

Signs have been mixed for the property industry: unsold land in government auctions could be an early warning sign of a slowdown, but that contrasts with home sales surging during the traditiona­lly slow month of July.

In one of the latest moves in the government’s cooling campaign, Shenzhen announced tougher curbs on sales last month.

“A market correction in third- to fourth-tier cities in response to the shanty-town policy change will likely come later than expected,” Yang said.

“Apart from the resilient sentiment, an expected stronger supply in the second half will also help stoke sales.” — Bloomberg

 ??  ?? On the rise: High-rise flats are under constructi­on in Shenzhen. China’s new-home prices rose at the fastest price in 22 months in July, climbing 1.2% from the previous month. — Reuters
On the rise: High-rise flats are under constructi­on in Shenzhen. China’s new-home prices rose at the fastest price in 22 months in July, climbing 1.2% from the previous month. — Reuters

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