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China's home-price fall deepens despite policy support, FDI slips

Published 18/11/2014, 11:07
China's home-price fall deepens despite policy support, FDI slips

By Xiaoyi Shao and Kevin Yao

BEIJING (Reuters) - China's home prices fell in October by the most since 2011, Reuters calculations show, in spite of government support measures to try to end a national downturn that threatens to stifle economic growth.

Prices last month slumped 2.6 percent from a year earlier, according to the calculations based on nationwide prices reported by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).

House prices in the capital Beijing dropped 1.3 percent year on year - the first fall since October 2012.

Falling prices may deter investors who are seeking capital gains, with some analysts expecting the housing market correction to continue.

"China's housing market is still on the way down in its correction," said Bill Adams, senior international economist for PNC Financial Services Group. "Real estate corrections can persist for 5-7 years, meaning this slump in China is likely to persist into 2015 and 2016 at least."

But other analysts are more optimistic and believe the market may be bottoming.

Liu Jianwei, senior statistician at the NBS, said recent policy relaxations may have boosted home-buying interest as developers promoted sales to reduce inventories.

He pointed to the milder 0.8 percent month-on-month price decline in October, versus September's 1 percent monthly fall.

Home price figures published since January 2011 are not comparable with previous periods as the bureau introduced a new calculation method.

Adding to pessimism on Tuesday was news that foreign direct investment in January-October was down 1.2 percent from a year earlier.

The fashionable service sector attracted $53.1 billion (34 billion pounds) versus the modest $32.5 billion that flowed into once-rampant manufacturing businesses.

Despite moderating FDI growth, China has repeatedly said it expects its FDI to hit a record high of $120 billion this year, barring no sharp changes in global capital flows.

MORTGAGE RATES CUT

Falling housing prices have led the government to cut mortgage rates and minimum downpayment levels in late September for some homebuyers. That was one of its biggest steps this year to boost an economy increasingly threatened by a sagging housing market, which directly impacts on about 40 other sectors of the economy.

New home prices fell month-on-month in 69 of the 70 major cities the NBS monitors, unchanged from September. Year-on-year, home prices fell in 67 cities in October, up from 58 in September.

Despite a range of stimulus measures unveiled since April, China's annual growth slowed to 7.3 percent in the third quarter, the weakest since the global financial crisis.

The bad loan ratio at Chinese banks rose to 1.16 percent at the end of September, up 0.09 percentage points from June, adding to concerns that the slow economy and cooling property market might hit banks and increase financial risks.

Foreign direct investment into China reflected shifting patterns in global commerce. Among the 10 biggest investors into China, flows from South Korea expanded 26.4 percent on an annual basis and from Britain surged 32.4 percent.

© Reuters. Man works at a construction site of a new building in Beijing

In contrast, investment from Japan plunged 42.9 percent from a year earlier while FDI from the United States fell 16.2 percent and European Union dropped 23.8 percent.

(Additional reporting by Jake Spring and Gui Qing Koh; Editing by Eric Meijer and Richard Borsuk)

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