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China home prices grow faster in April despite tightening in big cities

Published 05/02/2016, 11:20 PM
Updated 05/02/2016, 11:30 PM
© Reuters. A woman rides a tricycle carrying a child near a residential compound in Beijing's Tongzhou district

HONG KONG (Reuters) - China's home prices continued to grow from a year earlier at an accelerating pace in April despite tightening housing measures introduced in big cities, two private surveys showed.

Prices of new homes in 100 cities last month rose an average 9 percent from a year earlier, a poll by property services firm China Real Estate Index System (CREIS) showed on Sunday, quickening from the 7.4 percent rise in March.

In the biggest ten cities, including Shenzhen and Shanghai, home prices were up 14.4 percent from a year ago, compared with 12.8 percent in March. The increases in Shanghai and Shenzhen come despite local authorities tightening downpayment requirements for second homes and raising the eligibility bar for non-residents in late March.

However, compared with the previous month, prices rose 1.5 percent in April, the survey showed, easing from 2.5 percent in March.

CREIS said home transaction volumes in Shenzhen and Shanghai have fallen after the tightening, and it expected the rise in prices would slow in the two cities.

A separate survey from Real Estate Information Corporation (CRIC) showed average prices in the 288 biggest cities rose 7.2 percent in April compared with a year earlier, improving from 5.6 percent increase in March.

On a monthly basis, however, prices gained 1.5 percent last month, faster than 1.2 percent in March, said CRIC, owned by E-House China Holding Ltd (N:EJ), showing smaller cities were increasingly posting price gains, helped by a slew of government measures.

© Reuters. A woman rides a tricycle carrying a child near a residential compound in Beijing's Tongzhou district

While property prices in top-tier Chinese cities are booming, prices in smaller cities, where most of China's urban population lives, are still weakening, complicating government efforts to spread wealth more evenly and arrest slowing economic growth.

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