China’s capital Beijing has relaxed some rules on multiple home purchases after 13 years as part of the country’s effort to stimulate a stubbornly stagnant property market.
Families that reach current ownership limits will be allowed to purchase one more home in the area outside Beijing’s fifth ring road, according to a notice issued by the housing authority late Tuesday.
In addition, single adults who hold a Beijing hukou, or permanent residence permit, as well as non-hukou holders who have paid social insurance or income tax for five or more years, will be allowed to buy a second property in the area.
The easing of the rules – originally put in place in 2011 to ease speculative buying – came on the same day that new statistics underscored the property market’s continued slump. New home sales in April by the top 100 Chinese developers drooped 44.9 per cent year on year to 312.2 billion yuan (US$43 billion), and fell by 12.9 per cent compared with March, according to China Real Estate Information Corporation.
Home transactions outside the fifth ring road accounted for around 80 per cent of the total in the city in 2023, and the area’s stock of available homes also hovers around the same level, according to data compiled by Centaline Property Agency.
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“To allow residents to purchase one more unit is expected to warm the home market given the transaction performance in the area,” said Chen Wenjing, director of market research at China Index Academy, citing Centaline’s data.
“Still, the process of such easing in Beijing will remain gradual, with those policies that were introduced in an overheated market, which are not in line with the current needs, the first to be adjusted.”
Tier 1 cities’ policy easing has been slow on purpose, in order to unleash home demand gradually and not affect home demand in surrounding cities, Everbright Securities said in a note on Tuesday. “Given the continued weakness of the property market, we think that while the process could be accelerated, it will remain gradual unless policymakers have lost patience,” Everbright said. “However, as China’s Q1 growth beat forecasts, we think it is unnecessary for tier 1 cities to relax restrictions to the same extent [as] Chengdu and Nanjing in the near term.”