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China’s housing may get extra help by July’s end as policymakers strive to reverse slump

  • Policymakers, concerned about weak domestic demand, may ‘step up easing rhetoric and measures’ at this month’s Politburo meeting, Goldman Sachs says

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A photo from June shows a housing project under construction by Chinese property developer Country Garden in Tianjin. Photo: AFP
Yulu Aoin Hong KongandYuke Xiein Beijing

More measures to revive China’s property sector and the economy are likely at this month’s Politburo meeting, after the third plenum pledged to overhaul the industry, according to analysts.

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But the property sector will continue to be a drag on economic growth and is unlikely to see any improvement soon, considering the challenges to restore consumer confidence and weak demand, they warned.

Though no new policies to prop up the property sector have been unveiled, the central government reiterated its resolution to “accelerate the construction of a new model of real estate development” following the third plenum, a twice-a-decade event to outline the economic blueprint for the next five years, according to the full text of the meeting released by Xinhua News Agency on Sunday.

Beijing’s pledge to reform the sector includes revamping financing methods and the presale system, as well as improving the property tax, the document showed. Additionally, it called for an “integrated urban-rural development”, adding to market bets on a potential revamp to the hukou or household registration system, and urban and rural resources.

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Han Wenxiu, executive deputy director of the office of the Central Committee for Financial and Economic Affairs, told a press conference on Friday that an ongoing urbanisation process will “offer space for high-quality development in the real estate sector”.

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