The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Home prices fall most in seven years before rescue

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SHANGHAI: China’s home prices fell the most in seven years in October, underscori­ng the depths of the downturn that prompted policymake­rs to bail out the sector.

New-home prices in 70 cities, excluding state-subsidised housing, fell 0.37% last month from September, a 14th straight decline, National Bureau of Statistics figures showed yesterday.

The existing-home market fared worse, down 0.47%, the steepest decline since 2014.

The real estate slump is one of the main drags on the world’s second-largest economy, as cash-strapped developers shrink investment­s and households hoard savings.

Falling home prices are doing little to improve home buyer sentiment, which is seen as key to stemming a more than yearlong drop in sales and reviving the industry.

“The home market improvemen­t was weaker than expected in October, and we haven’t seen evidence of a turnaround so far this month,” Chen Wenjing, associate research director at China Index Holdings, said before the figures were published. “It takes time for buyers to step out of wait-andsee mode.”

Home sales dropped 23% last month from a year earlier, deepening from a 16% decline in the previous month, according to Bloomberg calculatio­ns based on official data released Tuesday. Property investment also worsened, slumping 16%.

In the past week, officials have taken clear steps to try to reduce the economic burden of Covid restrictio­ns and to rescue the property market, in a strong sign that the government is turning its attention toward shoring up the economy.

Regulators last Friday issued a 16-point plan that included allowing developers to extend bank loans and trust borrowings, Bloomberg reported.

On Monday, “quality” property developers were allowed greater access to the money homebuyers pay in advance for new homes.

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