China's housing crackdown nod to Xi's new priority

Published Wed, Jul 28, 2021 · 09:50 PM

AFTER a years-long campaign to tame property prices, China is upping the ante to break a stubborn cycle of gains that's made homes increasingly unaffordable.

In recent days, China jacked up mortgage rates in a major city, vowed to accelerate the development of government subsidised rental housing, and moved to increase scrutiny on everything from financing of developers and newly-listed home prices to title transfers. Echoing President Xi Jinping's famous words that "housing is for living in and not for speculation", Vice-Premier Han Zheng added that the sector shouldn't be used as a short-term tool to stimulate the economy.

The intensified focus on real estate - an industry that was already under the scanner - mirrors broader crackdowns on businesses such as education that are seen as widening social inequities. As China's economy slows and President Xi tries to increase the nation's birth rate, the policies underscore the Communist Party's growing resolve to respond to mounting dissatisfaction with hoarded wealth and narrowing avenues for advancement.

While China has spent years trying to cool property prices, analysts say this round of crackdowns will be different. One clear signal came in Vice-Premier Han's comments on steering away from using real estate to provide short-term boosts for the economy.

"In the past, Beijing has consistently used the property sector to stabilise overall growth," Nomura analysts wrote in a research note, adding that they expect Beijing to change its playbook. Policymakers won't lift property restrictions this time partly due to concerns about a systemic financial crisis, the analysts wrote.

Another signal came from the unusually large number of government entities that vowed recently to strengthen measures on everything from project development and home sales, to rental and property management services. Eight policy bodies said in a joint statement that they would step up penalties for misconduct. In the line of fire will be developers that default on debt repayments, delay deliveries on pre-sold homes or elicit negative news or market concerns.

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Local bureaucrats' careers are on the line. Officials in cities that lack sufficient regulations and experience rapid price spikes will be held accountable, Zhang Qiguang, an official for the Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Development said on July 22.

On Monday, commentary from state-media Xinhua urged governments across the nation to keep home prices at a reasonable level and make it an urgent task. Investors have responded by selling property stocks, with the recent stream of news piling pressure on developers that were already being pressed to deleverage and meet China's "three red lines" on debt metrics.

China Chengxin International Credit Rating revised its outlook for the country's real estate sector to negative from stable on Monday, citing concerns about policy tightening and weakened investor confidence.

"Owning property is one of the key ways in which income inequality has worsened in China so the clamp down will come and will be severe," said Alicia Garcia Herrero, the Hong Kong-based chief economist for Asia- Pacific at Natixis. The cost of mortgages will increase, particularly for those with multiple homes, as will things like property taxes, she estimated.

The Chinese government needs to maintain a delicate balance. The real estate sector accounts for 13 per cent of the economy from just 5 per cent in 1995, according to Marc Rubinstein, a former hedge fund manager who now writes about finance.

Policy missteps could have unintended consequences for the banking system. Chinese banks had over 50 trillion yuan (S$10 trillion) of outstanding loans to the real estate sector, more than any other industry and accounting for about 28 per cent of the nation's total lending.

Of those loans, about 35.7 trillion yuan were mortgage loans to households and 12.4 trillion yuan were for property development, according to official data.

But all signs point to the government's determination to ensure social stability, even if it spells near-term turmoil for capital markets. Just in June, Guo Shuqing, chairman of the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission, warned against betting that property prices will never fall. BLOOMBERG

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