News Brief

More Trouble For Chinese Economy? Home Prices See Steepest Drop In Eight Years, Casting Doubt On Real Estate Sector

Nayan DwivediNov 16, 2023, 03:04 PM | Updated 03:03 PM IST
China President Xi Jinping. (Representative image).

China President Xi Jinping. (Representative image).


In a concerning development for China's property market, home prices registered the most significant decline in eight years in October, intensifying concerns over buyer sentiment and placing additional pressure on the government to address the weakening real estate sector.

National Bureau of Statistics figures revealed that new home prices in 70 cities, excluding state-subsidised housing, fell by 0.38 per cent last month, marking the most substantial drop since February 2015, as reported by Business Standard.

This follows a 0.3 per cent decrease in September.

The recent decline contributes to mounting evidence of a persistent housing downturn, as official figures this week indicated a contraction in sales and a deepening decline in property investment.

Despite stimulus measures introduced since August in major cities, the property market's sluggish performance continues to weigh on China's economic recovery.


The secondary market experienced a more pronounced drop, with prices sliding by 0.58 per cent, the most significant decline since October 2014, according to the figures.

In an effort to support the real estate sector, Beijing is reportedly planning to inject at least 1 trillion yuan ($138 billion) of low-cost financing into urban village renovation and affordable housing programmes.

However, some economists express scepticism about the effectiveness of these measures compared to previous efforts.

The property crisis in China has affected nearly all major developers, struggling with debt repayment and project completion since a credit crunch emerged three years ago.

Notably, China Vanke Company, one of the few remaining investment-grade builders, witnessed a plunge in its dollar bonds recently, following the default of industry giant Country Garden Holdings.

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