by winston » Wed Jun 17, 2009 4:22 pm
China’s Property Prices Unlikely to Fall Further (Update1)
June 17 (Bloomberg) -- China’s property prices are unlikely to fall further as increased money supply and credit expansion inflate asset prices, BNP Paribas said, citing China Real Estate Chamber of Commerce President Nie Meisheng.
Residential prices will be the first to rebound, driven by urbanization, followed by commercial property such as shopping centers, BNP Paribas wrote in a note today, citing comments made by Nie at a June 11 workshop organized by the bank.
China’s domestic banks extended a record 5.84 trillion yuan ($855 billion) of loans in the first five months of 2009, almost triple the value a year earlier. Zurich-based UBS AG forecasts new credit may reach 8 trillion yuan in 2009. Housing prices in 70 Chinese cities fell 1.1 percent in April from a year earlier, the smallest drop in three months, according to data from the National Development and Reform Commission.
The central bank has cut interest rates five times since September, scrapped quotas that limited lending and pressed banks to support the government’s 4 trillion yuan stimulus program. China’s property sales rose 45.3 percent in the first five months to 1 trillion yuan from a year earlier, the statistics bureau said June 10. That compares with a 19.5 percent decline for all of 2008.
China’s government is unlikely to adopt a property tax within three years due to “several technical difficulties,†Nie said, according to the BNP Paribas report.
A measure of property developers on the Shanghai Composite Index has more than doubled this year, leading gains among the five industry groups on the gauge.
It's all about "how much you made when you were right" & "how little you lost when you were wrong"