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Tighter loan rules curb buying

By Wu Yiyao (China Daily Europe) Updated: 2017-02-19 15:24

Shanghai, Shenzhen see biggest dips of 60 percent of real estate volume in January

Homebuyers face more pressure in obtaining finance after mortgage lending was tightened in several major cities, in a series of measures aimed at curbing speculative buying and cooling down the overheated property market, analysts say.

Although no official circular has demanded banks raise interest rates for homebuyers, banks in Beijing, Tianjin and Guangzhou have reduced discounts on benchmark rates by some 5 percent since the beginning of this month, according to a report in National Business Daily.

In Zhengzhou, Henan province, homebuyers say banks stopped offering discounts on benchmark rates to home loan applicants in January. In December, discounts of 5 percent were widely available in the city.

 Tighter loan rules curb buying

A property project is promoted at a Pearl River Delta realty fair in Guangzhou. Mao Siqian / Xinhua

In Shanghai, bank staff say their lending quotas shrank significantly since late January.

"Home loan applicants' information and financial capacities are scrutinized. Lenders across the city are more prudent as required by the risk management operation process," says Zhang Juyin, an employee of the credit arm with a Shanghai-based bank.

Jiang Chao, chief macro analyst with Haitong Securities Co, says that the monetary policies are likely to be tightened upon recent reverse repurchase rates, a benchmark for liquidity.

The weeklong, fortnight and 28-day reverse repurchase rates have risen 10 basis points to 2.35 percent, 2.5 percent and 2.65 percent, according to data from the central bank.

Tightened lending has excluded some potential homebuyers from the residential property market in some cities, denting the already declining transaction volume.

The combined transaction volume of residential properties in 30 major cities dropped 36.7 percent month-on-month in January by space volume.

Shanghai and Shenzhen lost the most with a more than 60 percent month-on-month plunge, and Beijing followed with a 50 percent decline. Second-tier cities also lost 42 percent month-on-month in terms of transaction volume, a research note says.

Most major cities will continue to see lower transaction volumes in 2017, particularly those cities with fast growth of average prices in the past two years, says the research note from real estate services provider JLL.

"The heat is cooling and investors are becoming rational. Data in January and early February have signaled the basic tone of the residential market in 2017, with more calmness and stability," says Zhang Dawei, chief analyst with Centaline Property.

Lower-tier cities have benefited from the spillover effects of a cooled market in major cities, as potential buyers are likely to shift to smaller cities with more relaxed policies over homebuyers' qualification, down payment requirements, and more affordable prices and favorable loan rates.

"An increasing number of residents are considering buying properties in lower-tier cities, particularly in their hometowns or key cities near their hometowns instead of in first-tier cities," says Ma Weiqi, sales manager with Yuhongda Real Estate Ltd in Hefei, Anhui province.

wuyiyao@chinadaily.com.cn

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