Analysis-China’s key property rescue tools are too hard to use to make an impact

By Liangping Gao and Clare Jim

BEIJING/HONG KONG (Reuters) – Key tools China introduced last year to stabilise the property market are making very little impact, pressuring Beijing to find new solutions for the crisis-hit sector, which analysts say must involve large-scale direct state purchases of empty apartments.

In what officials touted as a “historic” turning point for China’s property market, the People’s Bank of China (PBOC)announced in May 2024 a 300 billion yuan ($41.4 billion) relending programme, meant to facilitate 500 billion yuan in loans to firms controlled by local governments to buy empty homes and repurpose them for affordable housing.

Authorities hoped this would help reduce the giant stock of unsold apartments and improve developers’ cash flows, allowing them to resume stalled projects in a virtuous circle that would halt the market’s severe downturn since 2021.

But by the end of September, only 16 billion yuan had been drawn from the facility.

Analysts say the design of this scheme overlooks financial and operational constraints that state-owned firms (SOEs) find hard to overcome. But reducing housing inventory is key to arresting the decline of the property sector, prompting suggestions from some economists for the tool to be replaced or complemented by fiscal intervention for apartment purchases.

Updated data for the end of December was expected to be released along with the PBOC’s quarterly report on the usage of its structural tools last week. Its absence further fuelled suspicions that this tool was not working as swiftly as intended.

“It does suggest that the PBOC thought there was something potentially embarrassing or sensitive in this data,” said Christopher Beddor, deputy China research director at Gavekal Dragonomics.

“It’s pretty clear in retrospect that May 2024 was not the major turning point for the property sector that it was hyped up to be.”

A person from the central bank’s media department couldn’t confirm whether or when new data on the relending facility would be released. The PBOC did not immediately respond to separate questions on this tool’s efficiency and future plans.

A second property rescue programme is also progressing slowly. A move last year allowing local governments to use special debt to repurchase idle land from developers has only led to few small-sized deals, with property firms saying officials only want parcels with high returns potential.

The tools were designed so that any purchases by state entities are driven by financial considerations, thus limiting the moral hazard risk of authorities picking which developers to support, having bashed the industry for irresponsible expansion.

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