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China property: Shanghai, Shenzhen could drop buying curbs after surprise Beijing move

China property: Shanghai, Shenzhen could drop buying curbs after surprise Beijing move

Beijing's surprise move to
lift home-purchase restrictions in outlying areas will help stabilise housing prices in the capital by next year, according to analysts, who added that other major cities like Shanghai and Shenzhen could follow suit.
The municipal government said on Friday that families with Beijing residency, as well as those who paid social insurance and individual income tax in the city for a set period, would be allowed to buy new and second-hand homes outside the Fifth Ring Road, a major highway encircling the suburbs.
The policy change also modified the rules around the
housing provident fund – a government-backed savings scheme that subsidises home purchases and rentals. It raised the maximum loan for second homes to 1 million yuan (US$139,247) from 600,000 yuan and reduced the down-payment requirement for such purchases to 30 per cent, ending a higher threshold of 35 per cent that had been in place for inner-city homes.
'While Beijing's timing for policy relaxation is slightly surprising, we view the move as in line with the central government's tone of removing buying curbs in non-central areas,' said Jeff Zhang, an equity analyst at Morningstar.
Shanghai and Shenzhen – the most economically developed of China's four first-tier cities (Beijing and Guangzhou are the other two) – were likely to roll out similar measures targeting non-central areas, he said. Demand was unlikely to rebound this year because of a high base in the fourth quarter, but could stabilise in 2026, he added.
Beijing's surprise policy move 'came earlier than the market expected', as most investors expected stimulus measures in September because sales and home-price data are expected to deteriorate in August, HSBC analysts said in a report on Saturday.
'We think it's a positive change showing the government's enhanced proactiveness in rolling out measures, which will help strengthen market confidence and address the concern on stimulus being too late,' they said.
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