Property curbs to stay in bid to check prices

Updated: 2013-02-21 07:23

By Hu Yuanyuan (China Daily)

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 Property curbs to stay in bid to check prices

Potential homebuyers check property prices at a real estate fair in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province. Long Wei / for China Daily

Property price controls will be maintained, Premier Wen Jiabao vowed on Wednesday, in response to a rebound in the real estate market in some cities.

The latest policy signals government determination to curb prices amid a recovery in the property market across the country in the past few months, industry experts said.

The State Council decided in a meeting chaired by the premier to keep curbs on the purchase of residential housing for investment purposes and to expand the scope of the trial property tax.

There was a massive surge in the amount of residential floor space sold during the Spring Festival holiday week.

Tracking by the China Index Academy, a real estate research body, saw 21 of 27 cities monitored register sales of floor space more than five times the area of the corresponding holiday week last year and at higher prices.

The National Bureau of Statistics reported in December that 40 of China's 70 major cities saw property prices rise from the previous year, compared with 18 cities in November and 14 in October.

Policies to curb housing prices, introduced in early 2011, will have to be strictly followed, the State Council said.

Smaller cities will also see curbs to cool rising prices, it said.

To keep property prices in check, the government has taken an array of measures, ranging from raising the minimum down payment and higher interest rates for second-home mortgages to putting a conditional ban on the buying of properties by non-local residents.

A property tax was also launched in Shanghai and Chongqing on a trial basis. "We will stick to the policy to restrain speculative home purchasing", while supporting those who buy property for their own use, Wen said in a statement issued after the meeting.

Local governments in major cities should publish their annual targets for property price rises and improve accountability, he said.

Meanwhile, the government will at least maintain the land supply, and increase it in some cases, and boost the construction of the government-subsidized housing for low-income households, the State Council said.

The land supply for residential projects in 2013 will be in line with the average of the past five years. But a greater supply will be allocated to medium-sized and small apartments. A total of 4.7 million of subsidized units will be completed this year while construction will start on another 6.3 million units.

After the Spring Festival holiday week, housing sales have remained robust in large cities.

In the Tiantongyuan neighborhood of northern Beijing, Li Yubin, an estate agent with HomeLink, said: "We sold eight apartments in just the few days after the holiday. This was unimaginable over the past three years."

The number of potential buyers "has far exceeded" sellers, he said.

In Beijing, the average price of lived-in property has risen around 23 percent since October, according to HomeLink.

Meanwhile, land sales in 10 key cities almost tripled in the first month of 2013, fueled by property developers' improved cash flow and expectations of a rosy real estate market this year.

The rebound of the market fuel speculations that curbs will be boosted.

Media reports said that the down payment for second-home purchasers will probably be increased to 70 percent from the existing 60 percent, and the mortgage rate will also be hiked to 1.3 times the benchmark interest rate instead of the current 1.1 times.

"The government still has measures that could be used to cool down the sizzling market, such as tightening up bank loans to property developers and increasing the down payment for second home purchases," said Liu Chunyan, executive director of real estate service provider World Union.

However, he admitted that the prime property in key cities will face huge price hike pressures in 2013, due to the supply-demand imbalance. "But soaring prices across the country are still unlikely, considering the government's determination to rein in runaway property prices."

huyuanyuan@chinadaily.com.cn

(China Daily 02/21/2013 page1)

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