China new home price growth slowest in five months, private survey shows
Demand has cooled in its biggest cities following a slew of restrictions to stabilise surging prices
Beijing
CHINA'S August new home prices rose at the slowest pace in five months, as red-hot demand in its biggest cities cooled following a slew of restrictions to stabilise surging prices, a private-sector survey showed on Wednesday.
New home prices in 100 cities climbed 0.2 per cent in August from a month earlier, slowing from a 0.35 per cent gain in July, according to data from China Index Academy, one of the country's largest independent real estate research firms.
Authorities have stepped up efforts to rein in housing prices this year with measures such as restrictions on home purchases and higher mortgage rates.
The southern city of Guangzhou on Tuesday introduced a pricing reference for resale homes to curb its red-hot market.
Around 10 cities including Shanghai and Shenzhen have already implemented similar pricing systems.
"In the third and fourth quarter, property control measures will continue to be refined, and become more comprehensive and frequent, to plug any (policy) loopholes," said Cao Jingjing, research director at China Index Academy.
Prices in the biggest tier-one cities such as Shanghai and Beijing rose the slowest, compared with price growth in tier-two cities and even smaller cities, up 0.11 per cent versus July's 0.54 per cent growth.
The slowdown in tier-1 cities was mainly due to control policies in those markets and Covid-19 related measures in Shanghai due to a recent outbreak in the financial hub, said Ms Cao.
On an annual basis, China's new home prices grew 3.51 per cent in August, slowing from July's 3.81 per cent increase, the slowest clip since December 2020.
Land sales to developers by floor space declined 32 per cent in August from a month earlier, and fell 42 per cent on an annual basis, separate data from the group showed. The National Bureau of Statistics will release official August data for China's home prices in mid-September. REUTERS
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