China's home prices extend declines despite support measures
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[March 15, 2024] By
Liangping Gao and Ryan Woo
BEIJING (Reuters) -China's new home prices dropped for an eighth
straight month in February, official data showed on Friday, suggesting
the fragile property market is struggling to find a bottom despite a
slew of measures to shore up the sector.
New home prices fell 0.3% month-on-month, in line with January's
decline, according to Reuters calculations based on National Bureau of
Statistics (NBS) data.
On a year-on-year basis, prices fell 1.4%, faster than the 0.7% drop in
January and the biggest decline in 13 months.
The property sector has lurched from one crisis to another since 2021
after a regulatory crackdown on developers' high leverage led to a
liquidity crisis.
So far, authorities have not rolled out massive stimulus to support
developers, but have instead taken incremental steps to revive the
sector but to limited effect.
Analysts attributed the price declines to a slow season and disruptions
caused by the eight-day Lunar New Year break.
"It will take time for demand, home buyers' income and confidence to
recover this year," said Zhang Dawei, an analyst at property company
Centaline, who expects prices in first-tier cities to grow slightly in
March.
China in January launched a "whitelist" mechanism that orders state
banks to boost lending to residential projects. More big cities
including Shanghai and Shenzhen have also eased purchase curbs to lure
homebuyers.
Home prices fell in 59 cities in February, up from 56 the previous
month. Three of the four first-tier cities, including Beijing and
Shenzhen, registered a month-on-month decline in prices last month.
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Home buyers stand near a window at an unfinished residential
building of the Gaotie Wellness City complex in Tongchuan, Shaanxi
province, China September 12, 2023. REUTERS/Tingshu Wang/File photo
"Declining property prices will create a negative wealth effect,
acting as a headwind to consumption," said Lynn Song chief
economist, Greater China at ING.
"Measures including scrapping purchase restrictions, property
project whitelists, and the February cut to the 5-year loan prime
rate to help lower mortgage rates are steps in the right direction,
but further supportive policies may still be needed."
China last month announced its biggest ever reduction in the
benchmark mortgage rate to prop up the struggling property market.
Premier Li Qiang in his government work report to the parliament
earlier in March, vowed to stabilise the property sector with
targeted measures while providing financing to "justified" projects.
Hwabao Trust economist Nie Wen said sales in first-tier cities will
improve in March, but that it remains to be seen whether overall
property sales can bottom out.
The statistics bureau will release data on property sales and
investment on Monday.
(Reporting by Qiaoyi Li, Liangping Gao and Ryan Woo. Editing by Sam
Holmes.)
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