beijing property market won't turn bearish in '08: report
<Property in Beijing>
BEIJING (Reuters) - beijing's real estate market will not see a major
slowdown in 2008 despite Beijing's intensified efforts to cool excessive
price rises, the top government think-tank said in a report published on
Monday. <Property in Beijing>
Urban property prices rose less rapidly in March than in the first two
months, and the property outlook index, which covers price and investment
trends, continued to decline in March after peaking in November. <Property
in Beijing>
But the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS) said that it was still
premature to draw the conclusion that the market was heading south. <Property
in Beijing>
"Although transaction volumes have been declining in some cities since 2007
and more buyers are now waiting on the sidelines, that does not necessarily
indicate the approach of a turning point," it said in a report summarized by
the official beijing Securities Journal.<Property
in Beijing>
beijing's urbanization and residents' desire for better housing, compounded
by the scarcity of land and the government's tightened grip on land supply
to curb investment, would put continued pressure on prices in the long run,
it said. The National Development and Reform Commission, beijing's top
economic planner, also said recently that upward pressure on property prices
would increase in the second quarter as more people put their money in
property to avoid the erosion of returns faced by bank deposits. <Property
in Beijing>
CASS said that inflows of speculative capital from overseas would increase
during the remainder of the first half of the year, as investors sought
shelter from global economic turbulence and bet on continuing appreciation
of the yuan. <Property in Beijing>
To brake increases in property prices, Beijing would continue its tightening
campaign, including by curbing land supply and loan growth and giving
further policy incentives aimed at increasing the supply of more affordable
housing, it said. <Property in Beijing>
CASS said the government also needed to curb the hoarding of land by
developers, raise the downpayment requirement for second homes, which is
currently 40 percent, and start to levy a general property tax. <Property
in Beijing>
(Reporting by Langi Chiang; Editing by Jason Subler and Ken Wills)
http://www.roofinder.com/property-in-beijing/index.html
Keywords: Property in Beijing