The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Property nadir in sight, bigger families expected

Falling prices will facilitate more space for people

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“The property market has shifted into a new phase, allowing people to lead a better life.” Wang Yongqun

SHANGHAI: New home prices in major Chinese cities continued to ease in October with more cities seeing negative month-onmonth growth, but industry experts hold the view that the market is about to bottom out and stage a recovery curve, considerin­g recent macroecono­mic policies.

Compared to September, more Chinese cities saw new home prices edge down in October, while in terms of year-on-year comparison­s, first-tier cities reported growth versus a bigger drop in second and third-tier cities, said Sheng Guoqing, chief statistici­an with the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) urban division.

In October, 58 out of the 70 cities polled saw new home prices drop month-on-month, four more than the month prior, and the number of cities reporting year-on-year price drops stood at 51, one more than in September, said the NBS.

The four top-tier cities registered a 2.6% year-on-year growth in new home prices, but slid 0.1% from a month earlier, according to the NBS.

The 31 second-tier cities tracked by the NBS reported a decline of 0.3% month-on-month on average in new home prices in October, and a decrease of 1.3% from a year earlier.

In 35 third-tier cities, new home prices slipped 0.4% month-on-month and 3.9% annually.

The Covid-19 outbreaks’ negative impact on the property market recovery is being felt, but previously introduced supportive measures have been of some help, said Chen Xiao, a senior analyst with the Zhuge Real Estate Data Research Centre.

There is some encouragin­g news for the property sector.

The People’s Bank of China (PBOC) – the country’s central bank – and the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission (CBIRC) have made moves to strengthen collaborat­ion and safeguard the healthy developmen­t of the stock, bond and property markets in order to better satisfy people’s living requiremen­ts, Chen said.

During the seven days between Nov 8 and 14, a series of supportive policies were reportedly introduced, notably 16 measures co-released by the PBOC and the CBIRC, which indicated more financial support would be provided to the real estate sector to assist its stable and healthy developmen­t, Securities Daily reported.

The PBOC and the CBIRC did not confirm this informatio­n.

“Based on the unpreceden­ted intensity of the supportive policies, we maintain our forecast that property market recovery will advance at an accelerate­d speed, the market will welcome a bottoming out and price declines will be narrowed,” Chen said.

Likewise, a rising number of cities experience­d price declines for pre-owned homes, showing that an adjustment is also underway in the secondary market, said Yan Yuejin, director of the Shanghai-based E-house China Research and Developmen­t Institutio­n.

In 62 cities, existing home prices declined month-on-month in October, one more than the previous month. And 64 cities recorded a slide in prices year-on-year, one more than that of a month earlier.

Regardless of the impact of Covid-19 and market adjustment­s, there is still ample room for a rise in urban housing floor area per

capita for would-be homeowners, as the property market has shifted into a new phase, allowing people to lead a better life, said Wang Yongqun, chief operating officer of real estate broker Lianjia.

In the meantime, expanding family sizes will also bring about extra living-space demand, and China’s continued urbanisati­on will support new housing demand in cities, Wangsaid.

Since the beginning of the year, related government divisions and local government­s have firmly upheld the principle of “houses are for living in, not for speculatio­n”.

They have actively launched measures in accordance with local conditions, supported rational housing demand and ensured the delivery of pre sold property projects, said Fu Linghui, an NBS spokespers­on.

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