Heavy tax to dampen speculation
Property prices in China's major cities saw a ninth consecutive monthly increase in February, with more reporting a price hike, statistics from a real estate research institute showed on Friday.
According to China Index Academy, a Beijing-based real estate research institute, the average price of new homes in 100 monitored cities was 9,893 yuan ($1,587) per square meter during the month, up 0.83 percent from January.
The month-on-month growth rate, according to the academy's figure, is down 0.17 percentage points from the previous month.
However, on a yearly basis, the growth was 2.48 percent in February, compared with a 1.2 percent year-on-year increase in January. It was the third time for 100 cities to see a price increase on a yearly basis, with the growth rate further accelerating.
Meanwhile, 10 more cities reported a price hike in February than the previous month, while the number of cities experiencing a price drop fell by nine from January.
The average home price in the key cities, including Beijing and Shanghai, stood at 16,596 yuan per sq m, an increase of 1.09 percent from the previous month and up 4.32 percent over the same period last year.
The continuous rising home price has triggered worries of mounting risks in the country's property market.
"We see continuing risks in China's property market and believe the country's newly elected leadership will be proactive in implementing existing policies to control the property market and seek to introduce new cooling measures if upside risks intensify in certain cities or regions," said Shen Lan, an economist at Standard Chartered Bank
But the government may tolerate a pickup in the sector as long as price increases remain in line with underlying fundamentals, according to Shen. "That said, continuing policy pressure should ensure that any upward pressure on home prices is kept in check," she added.
Meanwhile, the government will also put more land on the market to boost the supply, according to the statement.
Property developers, fueled by improved cash flow, are still quite optimistic about the market and are strengthening their competition for more land parcels.
In Beijing, a total of 13 land parcels valued at 10.7 billion yuan ($1.7 billion) were sold on Thursday, with the premium price dropping compared with the end of 2012, industry statistics showed.
There were 33 real estate enterprises competing for the 13 land parcels, and the highest price premium was 50 percent, lower than the record 400 percent premium recorded at the end of 2012.
According to Zhang Dawei, head of Centaline's research department, as the government has launched more land parcels in the market, the competition was not as fierce compared with the end of the year, effectively curbing the price increase.
Related Readings
Stricter measures to cool property market
Home prices continued to rise in Feb
Govt plans 20% to curb property prices
Housing still on unsustainable path