CGTN photo
Beijing and Shanghai were among the large Chinese cities to see month-on-month declines in property prices in June. Prices in Beijing dipped 0.4 percent – the biggest drop in two years, and in Shanghai prices fell 0.2 percent.
Zhou Zhifeng, a research director from JLL China, said,"The housing market actually cooled down in terms of sales volume quite dramatically from last year. The reason is very obvious, because of the tightening policies. Total sales volume in the primary market basically dropped by 15 percent.”
First-tier cities also increased the amount of land available to sell to developers in the first half of this year, as land supply volume saw a 15 percent year-on-year increase. The housing development plan during China's 13th Five-Year Plan period launched by the Shanghai government earlier this month, says the city will create 1.7 million new housing units by 2020, an increase of 60 percent. At the same time, the city will also oversee the supply of 700,000 new apartments for lease by 2020.
“A lot of people are shifting their priorities from maybe purchasing a property to leasing a property. I think the government is trying to respond to that by increasing the residential leasing stock in the market. The government obviously doesn't want to lose the white collar workers generating economic growth in Shanghai. So I think they are trying to accommodate the change to meet the needs of the population,” said James MacDonald, head of research from Savills China.