Real estate made China rich. Now it's looking more like kryptonite.
- House prices in China fell nearly 0.4% last month, per official statistics published Thursday.
- That's the steepest drop since February 2015.
China's property crash worsened last month in a sign the world's second-largest economy is still facing headwinds despite recent government interventions.
National Bureau of Statistics data published Thursday showed that new-home prices in 70 cities dropped 0.4% between September and October. That's the fifth month in a row prices have fallen and the steepest month-on-month decline since February 2015, according to Bloomberg.
Meanwhile, existing-home prices slumped 0.6% in October, per Thursday's data, the most in nine years.
Private ownership of property makes up a quarter of China's total Gross Domestic Product and nearly 70% of all household wealth, according to data from the Cato Institute.
That means the slump in home prices has been a major drag on the economy. China's growth faltered over the first half of 2023 before rebounding to beat third-quarter expectations, and Beijing is still grappling with a range of other issues including deflation, soaring youth unemployment, and a steep decline in exports.
The situation has been worsened by a seemingly never-ending debt crisis that's left two of the country's biggest property developers on the brink of collapse, with both Evergrande and Country Garden defaulting on bond repayments in recent years.
Evergrande serves as a case in point for how an industry that contributed to China's economic boom for decades has turned into a point of weakness.
The company was founded in 1996 and built massive inner-city housing complexes that helped accelerate China's move away from a socialist, agrarian economy. It eventually expanded beyond real estate, launching separate entities selling bottled water and electric cars, and in 2010 bought a Chinese soccer club that went on to become the country's most successful team.
But a government crackdown on developers' borrowing since 2020 has left the onetime behemoth scrambling for cash and facing liquidation next month unless it can come up with an acceptable debt restructuring plan. Evergrande's total valuation peaked at over $50 billion in October 2017 but has plunged to just $3 billion since that purge started, per data from CompaniesMarketCap – and its founder, Hui Ka Yan, was detained earlier this year on suspicion of financial crimes.
The drop in home prices in October came in spite of Beijing's recent efforts to arrest declines. In August, policymakers slashed down-payment requirements and permitted lenders to cut mortgage rates as part of a stimulus package intended to boost demand in the embattled property sector.
China's flagship CSI 300 and Hong Kong's Hang Seng stock-market indexes each slipped around 1% Thursday on the worrying housing-market data.
That's a sign investors are looking past US president Joe Biden's San Francisco summit with Chinese premier Xi Jinping and zeroing back in on China's economic struggles, according to analysts.
"China's fragile housing market has loomed back into focus," Hargreaves Lansdown head of money and markets Susannah Streeter said Thursday.
"Hopes for a significant trade breakthrough from talks between Joe Biden and Xi Jinping haven't materialized, despite some limited progress in healing the relationship," she added. "But the meeting has underwhelmed, with Chinese stocks largely falling as investors cast an eye back to domestic economic problems."