China's Property Market: A Steep Climb Back Up

Tue Sep 10 2024
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China's property market has been a rollercoaster ride over the past year, leaving investors and consumers alike feeling queasy. Standard Chartered CEO Bill Winters recently warned that the market 'has not yet completely bottomed out,' despite all the turmoil. Consumer confidence remains shaky, largely due to concerns about the state of the housing sector. While there have been occasional glimmers of increased activity, prices haven't stabilized in a meaningful way. The worry is that a bursting property bubble often precedes a financial crisis, usually accompanied by significant drops in GDP. China's Q2 growth of 4. 7% was already its lowest since early 2023. Last week, Bank of America slashed its forecast for Chinese GDP growth to 4. 8% this year and 4. 5% in both 2025 and 2026. Beijing has been implementing small-scale stimulus measures to try to boost the economy, including cutting loan rates and allowing homeowners to refinance their mortgages to free up cash for spending elsewhere. The government is being cautious about launching a massive stimulus program out of concern that it would balloon debt levels as other countries did during the initial Covid wave. So while Winters believes the current stimulus efforts should be sufficient, he acknowledges it may feel uncomfortable in the short term. But from a fiscal perspective, this approach seems prudent to avoid a recovery-prohibitive downturn. The path forward will likely involve steady steps up rather than than a dramatic turnaround.
https://localnews.ai/article/chinas-property-market-a-steep-climb-back-up-577d7c41

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