Editor's Note: The State Council, China's Cabinet, issued a new measure on April 17 which allows commercial banks to refuse loans to people buying their third houses in areas suffering from soaring property prices, in a fresh bid to cool down the country's red-hot property market. [Full Story]
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China's banking regulator will strictly implement the central government's macroeconomic policies that aim to curb soaring housing prices, an official said Tuesday.
Chinese Vice-Premier Li Keqiang said Friday that the government would continue to regulate the housing market and resolutely crack down on speculative property investment and other unreasonable market demands.
China's order for banks to transfer off-balance-sheet loans may lead to a large amount of bond issuance from real-estate companies, CLSA Asia-Pacific Markets said.
Housing prices in major Chinese cities rose 10.3 percent year on year in July, slowing from the 11.4 percent growth in June, the National Bureau of Statistics said Tuesday.
Shanghai's housing fund has stopped loans for third-home buyers, following cities like Beijing and Tianjin, which already adopted such measures in May, the Oriental Morning Post reported Friday, citing sources.
Slow income increases has become the most pressing concern for Guangdong residents, a recent report by the local government's think tank revealed.
The government is unlikely to come out with more tightening policies for the real estate sector in the second half, and is more inclined to allow the market to play a lead role in adjusting prices, a top industry think-tank official said on Thursday.
As the property market cools and the stock market flounders, investors are hunting for safe havens or exploring new ways to make easy money.
Historical Property Policies by State Council
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