This article by Property Wire on July 22, 2013 shows how China's
residential property market continues to defy expectations and prices
are continuing to rise.
Data shows that China’s economic growth slowed in the second quarter
of 2013. Its economy grew by 7.5%, down from 7.7% in the January to
March period.
However, property prices in the Chinese residential
market continued to grow in the first six months of 2013. According to
Knight Frank’s Global House Price Index, which measures mainstream house
prices in key cities around the world, property prices in China have
risen 10.8% so far in 2013.
The central government’s five new
measures introduced in early March represent the latest attempts to try
and cool property markets and control rapid price growth. But so far the
effect is limited.
In Beijing there is a 20% capital gains tax is
imposed on pre-owned home sales. This is exempted if a home owner sells
the property after over five years from its purchase and the apartment
is the only one owned by the family. Single adults with a permanent
Beijing resident registration are allowed to buy only one apartment if
they have no other homes registered under their names. The down payment
ratio for a qualified family’s second home has been increased to 70%.
A
new home price control target has been set in Shanghai with the aim of
keeping prices stable. Shanghai has also introduced differentiated
credit policies. Banks are not allowed to extend loans to buyers of
third or more homes and should adjust their requirement for down payment
ratio as well as interest rates for second home buyers. A 20% capital
gains tax on property sellers will be strictly levied in the city if the
original values of the homes can be verified.
In
Guangzhou the ceiling of new home price growth is pegged with the
increase in per capita disposable income. Non-registered residents are
eligible to buy only one home in the city if they are able to present
income tax or social insurance certificates to prove that they have
resided in the city for a cumulative 12 months over the past two years
prior to their home purchase.
‘Witnessing how different local
authorities have responded to these policies underlines the issues that
China continues to battle with as it tries to cool its housing market
down,’ said Nicholas Holt, Knight Frank’s Asia Pacific research
director.
‘On the one hand, local authorities do not want to
bite the hand that feeds them, while on the other, they must be seen to
support China’s State Council policies,’ he pointed
‘This is all
being fuelled by investors who, amid growing wealth continue to invest
significant proportions of their money into property. The lack of
alternative investment options for many retail investors makes this
situation unlikely to change,’ he added.
Article Source: http://www.propertywire.com/news/asia/china-residential-property-prices-201307228027.html
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