China May new home prices fall again, more stimulus expected

Published Thu, Jun 16, 2022 · 12:57 PM

CHINA’S new home prices in May fell for the second month this year, depressed by still fragile demand as widespread Covid-19 curbs dented already weak buyer confidence, suggesting more policy stimulus is needed to return the market to growth. Average new-home prices in 70 major cities dropped 0.1 per cent on a month-on-month basis, after a 0.2 per cent decline in April, according to Reuters calculations based on National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) data released on Thursday (Jun 16).

From a year earlier, prices slipped 0.1 per cent, down for the first time since September 2015 and retreating from a 0.7 per cent gain in April.

Year-on-year price growth has eased since May last year due to a slowing economy, tight mortgage disbursement and as sentiment weakened amid a liquidity crisis that led to some high-profile loan defaults by developers.

Shares of mainland developers fell on Thursday, with the CSI300 Real Estate Index down around 0.5 per cent after opening up about 2 per cent.

China’s property sector, a pillar of growth, deteriorated further in recent months, spurring the authorities to take additional measures to stimulate home demand hit by Covid-19 restrictions in some of the country’s biggest cities.

Shanghai was locked down for 2 months until the end of May, while the capital Beijing shut entertainment and other venues in some districts to contain outbreaks. China’s zero-Covid policy has hit supply chains and slowed activity across many business sectors.

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In May, more than 100 cities implemented easing measures to support the property sector, mainly targeting homebuyers in small and medium-sized cities, including cuts in mortgage rates, smaller downpayments and a relaxation in purchasing rules.

The central city of Wuhan on May 22 eased home purchase curbs for some buyers, allowing households with more than 1 child to buy up to 3 properties.

In May, 25 out of 70 cities surveyed by the NBS reported an uptick in new home prices from the previous month, compared with 18 cities recording a gain in April.

The property sector in small cities remained bleak last month with monthly new home prices down for the ninth month.

“Homebuyer confidence is low due to Covid-19 despite frequent stimulus policies,” said Zhang Dawei, an analyst with property consultancy Centaline.

China’s property market woes are likely to worsen this year with prices remaining flat and sales and investment falling further, according to a recent Reuters poll.

To boost demand, financial authorities last month cut their benchmark rate for mortgages and lowered the mortgage rate floor for first-time homebuyers.

Property sales by floor area in May fell at a slower pace for the first time in 3 months.

More easing policies targeted to help demand are expected in the coming months to stimulate the sector.

More stimulus policies are needed to stabilise the property market, especially further (reductions) in mortgage rates for buyers, said Centaline’s Zhang. REUTERS

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