Property prices in China's major cities kept rising in June
despite several rounds of government control measures intended to
cool the sector.
Property prices in 70 large cities rose by 5.8 percent
year-on-year, 0.7 percentage points higher than the growth rate in
May, according to a survey jointly released yesterday by the
National Development and Reform Commission and the National Bureau
of Statistics.
"As the second and third quarter is usually the hot season for
the property market, the climbing prices are understandable,"
Richard Wang, a researcher in Beijing with the global real estate
consultancy DTZ Debenham Tie Leung, told China Daily.
"Besides, since some of the macro control measures are just
guidelines, the local governments are still working on detailed
regulations, so it will take some time for those policies to take
effect."
Wang said he believes the figures for July will be a better
indicator of how the macro policies work.
Since April the central government has introduced a series of
measures to try to cool the market, including raising the one-year
benchmark lending rate by 27 base points to 5.85 per cent,
increasing down payments from 20 percent to 30 percent and
introducing a minimum capital adequacy ratio of 35 percent for
property developers.
Prices for newly-built homes climbed 6.6 percent last month
compared with a year earlier, 0.5 percentage points higher than the
previous month.
Residential property prices in Shenzhen, a booming city in South
China's Pearl River Delta region, jumped 14.6 percent on a yearly
basis, boasting the highest increase among the 70 cities
surveyed.
The next highest rise was in Beijing, which reported a 11.2
percent year-on-year hike in residential property prices.
"Even with these macro control measures, house prices in Beijing
will still endure a growing momentum in the future, given the
strong demand," said Peter Zhang, a senior manager with DTZ. "But
the growth rate may slow down."
Statistics show that eight cities saw new residential housing
prices fall in June from the previous month. Shanghai had the
largest drop 5.4 percent down from house prices in May.
"This shows that the real estate bubble in Shanghai has been
squeezed a little," said Wang from DTZ.
The price of a second-hand property increased on average by 4.9
percent year-on-year in June, 0.6 of a percentage point higher than
the previous month.
And that for non-residential properties, such as offices and
warehouses, in the 70 cities rose 5.3 percent on a yearly
basis.
Meanwhile, a report from DTZ shows that the flow of overseas
capital into China is accelerating, with commercial properties a
major target.
DTZ statistics show that foreign investment in the property
market reached US$4.5 billion in the first quarter of 2006,
exceeding the figure for the whole of last year US$3.5 billion.
Although sources said new rules to control foreign investment in
China's property market have been agreed and will soon be released,
it is unlikely to stop the flow of overseas capital, analysts
predicted.
"These measures will make highly speculative investors think
twice, but will not affect long-term investors who are confident in
China's economic prospects," said Nicholas Cho, director of DTZ's
investment department.
(China Daily July 21, 2006)