China's new home prices edge up, gains extend to cities

Average new home prices in China's 70 major cities rose 0.4 per cent in March from the previous month

Published Wed, Apr 18, 2018 · 09:50 PM

Beijing

CHINA'S new home prices rose for their 35th consecutive month in March, with more cities reporting growth as the government supported demand from first-time buyers and despite persistent curbs to dampen speculative demand.

Average new home prices in China's 70 major cities rose 0.4 per cent in March from the previous month, up from 0.2 per cent growth in February, Reuters calculated from National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) data published on Wednesday.

On a yearly basis, new home prices increased 4.9 per cent in March, slowing from February's 5.2 per cent increase, partly due to a high base effect as policymakers rushed to impose a flurry of fresh tightening measures in March 2017.

The majority of the 70 cities surveyed by the NBS still reported monthly price increases for new homes. Fifty-five cities reported higher prices in March, up from February's 44.

"Today's data shows there is still significant upwards price pressure," Yan Yujin, an analyst with Shanghai-based E-house China R&D Institute said. "It it possible some cities will release more tightening measures."

China's property market has soared since 2016, giving a major boost to the economy but also raising concerns about bubbles. Prices have slowly levelled off and even softened in tier-1 cities following government measures to rein in speculative investment.

While more than 100 cities have introduced some measures to cool home prices, analysts still expect moderate price appreciation in the country's vast number of smaller centres where regulations are less restrictive.

Price gains reported by smaller provincial capitals expanded by 0.3 percentage points in March from that in February.

Haikou, a port city and the capital of China's island province Hainan, became the top price performer in March, rising 2.1 per cent on-month.

Meanwhile, prices in top-tier cities also increased 0.1 per cent in March from February, reversing a fall in the previous month, the NBS said in a statement along with the data.

Ouyang Jie, vice-president of Shanghai-listed Future Land, said developers have been rushing to roll out new projects in the hope of accelerating sales and securing funding, especially in smaller cities where inventories are falling rapidly.

"More high-end projects were released into the market in March as some were delayed by the authorities in the beginning of the year when the National Congress was underway," said Joe Zhou, head of research for JLL China, a property services firm.

"Developers also have more pricing rights in smaller cities for now because they had a really good sales year in 2017 in those markets," he added.

But Mr Zhou also warned of the risks of a moderate price correction later this year with demand frontloaded in smaller cities and signs of softening as more supply becomes available.

China posted its fastest property investment in three years in the first quarter, driven by a surge in land values and as developers grew more confident about the policy outlook.

New home prices on average for the country are expected to rise faster than previously thought in 2018 on falling inventories and still robust demand from smaller cities, according to a Reuters poll last month.

New household loans, mainly mortgages, totalled 580 billion yuan (S$121 billion) in March. They made up 52 per cent of total new yuan loans, versus 33 per cent in February.

Chinese property developers are reporting firm results so far. Last week, China's second-largest property developer Vanke reported total contract sales of 154.26 billion yuan in the first quarter, up from 150.3 billion yuan made in the same period last year.

Higher borrowing costs pose a risk for the sector as they will potentially dampen demand, although mortgage rates still remain low compared with historic levels, analysts say. REUTERS

KEYWORDS IN THIS ARTICLE

BT is now on Telegram!

For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to  t.me/BizTimes

Property

SUPPORT SOUTH-EAST ASIA'S LEADING FINANCIAL DAILY

Get the latest coverage and full access to all BT premium content.

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Browse corporate subscription here