China's new home price growth slows in July: private survey

Growth weighed down by higher mortgage rates, price caps on resale homes and other steps to cool speculation

Aug 02, 2021


Beijing

CHINA'S growth in new home prices slowed in July for the first time in five months, with smaller cities especially weighed down by higher mortgage rates, price caps on resale homes and other steps to cool speculation, a private sector survey showed on Sunday.

New home prices in 100 cities rose 0.35 per cent in July from a month earlier, versus 0.36 per cent growth in June, according to data from China Index Academy, one of the country's largest independent real estate research firms.

This year, Chinese authorities have implemented measures to rein in the red-hot real estate market, including caps on developers' borrowing and strict bans on illegal flows of funds into the sector.

"New home growth softened in July against the backdrop of stringent measures and tighter credit", said the group's director, Cao Jingjing.

Growth in home sales is expected to remain mild as the curbs are unlikely to be eased, the survey said.

In July, China's housing ministry urged five cities including the eastern city of Jinhua and the south-eastern city of Quanzhou to stabilise their property markets, while the central bank ordered lenders in Shanghai to raise interest rates on mortgage loans.

Prices in China's smaller tier-three and tier-four cities rose 0.21 per cent on-month, versus 0.29 per cent in June. Tier-two cities, which include some provincial capitals, gained 0.29 per cent, slowing from June's 0.31 per cent rise.

Price growth in China's biggest cities such as Shanghai and Beijing, however, continued to accelerate, up 0.54 per cent versus June's 0.48 per cent growth, suggesting persistent demand for properties in the country's economically most vibrant cities.

But new home prices in the southern tech hub of Shenzhen declined 0.26 per cent, the first drop since February. Local media had warned in May that Shenzhen could be a testing ground for China's plans to impose a nationwide property tax, due to elevated home prices.

On an annual basis, China's new home prices grew 3.81 per cent in July, slowing from June's 3.89 per cent gain.

Resale homes also showed slower month-on-month price growth in July, while existing home prices in Shenzhen were down 0.43 per cent on-month.

Local governments in some hot property markets may implement pricing references for resale homes to stabilise prices, the survey said.

Land sales by floor space in 300 cities fell 25 per cent in July from a month earlier, and declined 38 per cent on an annual basis, separate survey data showed.

The National Bureau of Statistics will release official July data for China's home prices in mid-August.