China‘s New Home Prices Plunge at Recordโฃ Pace in October
BEIJING, Novโ 9 (Reuters) – China’s new home prices fell at โฃtheir fastest pace in โคa year in October, according to Reuters calculations based on official data released Thursday, deepeningโ concerns about โคthe country’s property sector and broader economic slowdown. The downturn signals โpersistent weakness in the housing market despite recent attempts by authorities โto stabilize it.
The โdecline โin home โprices underscores the fragility of China’s post-pandemicโค economicโฃ recovery, with the property sectorโฃ – historically a key driver ofโฃ growth – facing a prolonged crisis. The โคdownturn impacts homeowners,developers,and local governments reliant on โคland sales for revenue,and raisesโ the specter of further economic headwinds. The situation is being closely watched by global markets, given China’s โขsignificant โrole in the world economy.
Reuters calculations of official National Bureauโฃ of Statistics (NBS) โdata showโค new homeโ prices in 70 โmajor cities fell 0.2% in October, โmarking the steepest โmonthly decline since October โ2022. This follows a 0.1% drop in September. Year-on-year, new home prices wereโข down 0.3%, the same โขas in โขSeptember.
Ofโ theโ 70 citiesโฃ surveyed,โ 35 saw monthly price declines, โขwhile 13 โreported increases. Shenzhen saw the largest monthly drop, with a 2.1% โฃdecrease, followed by Guangzhou with a 1.4% fall. beijing recorded a 0.2% โคdecline, while Shanghai remained unchanged.
Second-handโ home prices fell in 38 of the โ70 โcities surveyed, with โa national average decline of 0.3% month-on-month, accelerating โขfrom September’s 0.2% drop. Year-on-year, second-hand home prices โขfell 5.1%.
The data โarrives amid ongoingโฃ struggles for major โขdevelopers like โขCountry Garden and โคEvergrande, both grappling โwith massive debt. Authorities have introduced some easing measures, including โlowering mortgage rates and โreducing down payment requirements โin some cities, but their impact has so far been limited.
Ryanโ Woo,โ Reuters bureau chief for Beijing, notes thatโค the ongoingโข situation encompasses issues ranging fromโข economics and politics to asset bubbles and climate change, impacting aโ broad spectrum โof Chinese society.