Category Archives: Overseas Property

Home prices rise in more Chinese cities

Home prices in more Chinese cities rose in June from the previous month as recent interest rate cuts encouraged buying and stoked expectations of a rebound in prices, the government said on Wednesday.

New home prices in 25 out of the 70 Chinese cities tracked by the government increased in June from the previous month, the National Bureau of Statistics said in a statement, up from just six in May.

The spread of price rises to more cities came despite steps to tighten the market in place for more than two years, including bans on buying second homes, hiking minimum down-payments and imposing property taxes in certain areas.

Expectations for a price rebound are on the rise after the economy recorded its slowest increase in more than three years in the second quarter, raising the likelihood of more policies to boost growth the rest of this year.

The central bank this month took the rare step of slashing interest rates for the second time since early June, which drove up home sales as mortgage costs were reduced, Ma Xiaoming, an NBS analyst, said in the statement.

Ma said housing demand has been accumulating amid efforts to cool the market and consumers rushed during June to buy due to “worries of a rebound in housing prices”.

Prices of new homes in another 24 cities were unchanged in June compared with 21 the previous month, while 21 cities saw prices fall on a monthly basis, down from 43 in May, the data showed.

Government officials have attributed the slowdown of the world’s second-largest economy, which grew 7.6 percent on-year from April to June, to the weakening of the property market as well as sluggish foreign demand.

Before the interest rate cuts, the government had since December already cut three times the amount of money banks must keep in reserve, to stimulate lending.

Chinese leaders have vowed to take further measures, and Premier Wen Jiabao last week called stabilising economic growth the government’s “top priority”.

Ba Shusong, a prominent government researcher, called on authorities to loosen controls on lending to buyers of small and medium-sized homes to bolster the economy, the state-run Economic Information Daily said on Wednesday.

Source CNA – 2012 Jul 18

Falling property investment drives China H1 FDI drop

China’s foreign direct investment inflows fell 3 per cent in the first half of 2012 versus last year, the Commerce Ministry said on Tuesday, the latest sign of intensifying headwinds facing the world’s second-largest economy as global growth slows.

The Commerce Ministry said on Tuesday that the country drew US$59.1 billion (S$74.6 billion) in foreign direct investment (FDI) between January and June, with June’s inflow alone down 6.9 per cent on year-ago levels at US$12 billion.

That confirmed figures given by a vice commerce minister on Monday.

“A drop of 3 percent in FDI in the first six months is mainly due to falling investment in the property sector which is the result of macro policies and we cannot say it is a bad thing,” Commerce Ministry spokesman Shen Danyang said.

Beijing is using strict curbs to cut speculative activity in real estate and Premier Wen Jiabao has made repeated personal pledges to keep them until prices come back to more reasonable levels.

FDI in the property sector fell 12.4 per cent in the first half versus a year earlier. Strip that out of the aggregate data and first-half FDI was down just 0.1 per cent versus last year at US$46.8 billion.

FDI is an important gauge of the health of the external economy, to which China’s vast factory sector is oriented, but it is small contributor to overall capital flows compared to exports, which were worth about US$1.9 trillion in 2011.

A surprising bright spot in the FDI data came from the European Union, where struggles with a festering sovereign debt crisis have seen China’s biggest overseas market cut back on orders for goods from Chinese factories.

The Commerce Ministry said FDI from the EU rose 1.6 per cent on-year in the first half to US$3.5 billion, reversing the 5.1 per cent on-year drop in the first five months.

China drew a record US$116 billion in foreign direct investment last year. The Commerce Ministry aims to attract an average of US$120 billion in each of the next four years.

Source Today – 2012 Jul 17