Feeling poorer: Property slump hurting Chinese consumers, clouds
recovery
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[April 14, 2023] By
Liangping Gao and Marius Zaharia
BEIJING/HONG KONG (Reuters) - Liu Baoxiang, who runs a mahjong parlour
in a city on China's rust belt, no longer splurges on extravagant
fashion items after seeing the two flats he owns lose roughly a third of
their value over the past two years.
"I was previously considered wealthy in the area," said Liu, who also
owns some commercial property in the northeastern city of Liaoyuan.
"I used to buy mink coats in the tens of thousands of yuan, but I've
hardly purchased any and haven't travelled lately."
While pockets of China's property market, which is responsible for
roughly a quarter of economic activity, are showing tentative signs of
stabilising, the impact of the sector's sharp downturn since 2021 is
still rippling across the economy, and clouding its recovery.
Economists call it the wealth effect: asset owners who feel poorer after
a sharp fall in prices tend to cut down on spending to rebuild their
fortunes.
In play now in China, where around 70% of household wealth is in
property, this phenomenon is weighing on the post-pandemic recovery of
household consumption, which Chinese policymakers have vowed to make a
more prominent driver of economic growth.
Capital Economics estimates net household wealth declined 4.3% overall
last year, due to falling house and stock prices, the first decline
since at least 2001.
"Households appear to have cut back their consumption in response to
negative wealth effects," said Julian Evans-Pritchard, head of China
economics at the research firm.
"Recent homebuyers with large mortgages will have suffered the most and
therefore likely cut back the most."
SMALL TOWN BLUES
Residents of smaller cities are feeling more pain than those living in
big centres like Shanghai or Beijing, where home prices have been more
stable.
Average new home prices in the 35 smallest cities among the 70 surveyed
by the statistics bureau, known as 'tier 3', saw their 13th consecutive
month of year-on-year declines in February.
The bureau does not release the exact prices, but real estate agents say
they are 20-30% off peaks in some of those cities and even further off
in smaller ones not covered by the official survey, such as Liaoyuan.
For new homes, the nationwide average price per square metre was 10,558
yuan ($1,543) for sales in January-February this year, 6.0% off its peak
in January-February 2021, separate data from the statistics bureau
showed.
A resident in the northern city of Langfang said her flat is now priced
at 8,000 yuan per sq m, less than half the 18,000 yuan she paid for it
three years ago.
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People walk on a street at a shopping
area in Beijing, China April 11, 2023. REUTERS/Tingshu Wang/File
Photo
"I have paid hundreds of thousands of yuan for a downpayment, paid
off over 1 million yuan in loans and currently have over 1 million
yuan in loans to repay," said Emily, who only gave her first name
for privacy reasons.
"I'm not going to spend money on anything this year. I need to
tighten the belt. The suffering is unbearable."
WEAK CONFIDENCE
To be sure, household consumption has picked up since China
dismantled its draconian COVID curbs in December, with domestic
tourism, cinemas and the catering industry leading the way. Car
sales, on the other hand, were flat year-on-year in March.
Consumer confidence, while still below the range set over the past
two decades, is also recovering from last year's record lows.
Retail sales were up 3.5% year-on-year in January-February and are
expected to accelerate in coming months when compared with last
year's smaller base, which was hurt by COVID curbs and lockdowns.
March data will be released on Tuesday.
But some economists - pointing to a rise in household bank deposits
of 17.8 trillion yuan ($2.60 trillion) last year - had expected a
much faster resurgence in household spending, as seen in the West
after COVID-19 curbs were lifted.
Data so far, including subdued inflation numbers, suggest most of
the expected pent-up demand from the pandemic has yet to be
unleashed.
Indeed, deposits rose a further 9.9 trillion yuan in the first
quarter of this year. Many Chinese are using savings to repay
mortgages early.
The lastest central bank survey found that in the first three months
of the year, the share of respondents saying they preferred to save
fell by 3.8 percentage points from the prior quarter but was still
relatively high at 58%.
Nie Wen, an economist at Hwabao Trust, says record savings are
unlikely to be converted into significant spending until the end of
this year or 2024 as uncertainty about China's growth outlook within
a slowing world economy remains high.
"Middle-class residents, accounting for 50% of consumption, remain
cautious," Nie said.
Social media content creator Jane would have felt more like a middle
class person had her 1.5 million yuan downtown apartment in the
southwestern city of Chongqing not fallen in value by some 14%.
"We don't buy new clothes anymore and we don't go out," she said,
referring to her and husband. "It feels like we've bought a prison
for ourselves."
($1 = 6.8376 Chinese yuan renminbi)
(Additional reporting by Shuyan Wang; Editing by Marius Zaharia and
Kim Coghill)
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