China’s central bank and banking regulator may ‘soon’ issue measures to limit the use of debt in property purchases after asset prices climbed, a Shanghai official said.
Regulators may reduce ‘leverage ratios’, Fang Xinghai, the director-general of Shanghai’s financial services office, said at a forum in Beijing yesterday.
A record US$1.27 trillion of new loans this year and inflows of cash from investors betting that the yuan will appreciate threaten to create stock and property bubbles. China’s banking regulator plans to review debt levels at some developers on concern that borrowings are fuelling excessive gains in property prices, a person familiar with the matter said previously.
‘Asset prices may continue to climb as foreign capital flows into China betting on the yuan’s gain,’ said Xing Ziqiang, an economist at China International Capital Corp in Beijing.
A measure of property stocks on the Shanghai Composite Index declined one per cent, the biggest fall among five industry groups.
‘Given the rise of asset prices, whether in real estate or the stock market, or some kind of other assets, there is a case for reducing the leverage ratio in these areas, particularly in the real estate area,’ Mr Fang said yesterday.
Source : Business Times – 10 Nov 2009
