In China, New Home Sales Are Up, Up, Up

September 20, 2011 at 10:35 AM
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While U.S. homeowners are lamenting the continuing depression in real estate prices and slack sales in cities across the nation despite record-low mortgage rates, home prices in China are at record highs in all 70 cities monitored by Beijing despite higher mortgage rates and property taxes imposed by authorities.

Bloomberg reports the government has been trying to tamp down China's exuberant property market, calling on local governments to add restrictions on home purchases. But local governments are reluctant to do so since property sales are a significant revenue source for them. Cheng Siwei, the head of Beijing's International Finance Forum quoted in London's Telegraph, says China's credit-fueled property market is "our version of subprime in the U.S."

Speaking at the World Economic Forum in the Chinese city of Dalian, The Telegraph quotes Cheng saying, "the tightening policy is creating a lot of difficulties for local governments trying to repay debt, and is causing defaults."

China's central bank has been aggressively fighting inflation and higher rates have suppressed the performance of Chinese stocks, which are in negative territory for the year. But real estate remains on a tear. Nanching in China's center and Urumqi in the west posted the biggest year-over-year gains, according to Bloomberg, up 9% and 8.8%, respectively.

The across-the-board gains in Chinese real estate may come as a surprise to Standard & Poor's, which downgraded the country's property development sector to negative from stable six months ago. S&P analyst Bei Fu said at the time: "We're likely to see more negative rating actions among Chinese developers in the next six to 12 months because tightened onshore credit conditions and [an] increasingly restrictive government policy are likely to drive weak sales for the remainder of the year."

China's central bank has raised interest rates three times this year to suppress credit. If China really is experiencing a property bubble–a conclusion not all analysts agree with–the economic repercussions of a popping of the bubble would likely weaken one of the few remaining pillars of an already ailing global economy.

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