Advertisement
China property
BusinessChina Business

China’s first ever decline in mortgage loans sets alarm bells ringing, piling pressure on Beijing to stem property market slide

  • Personal mortgage loans shrank in the second quarter from a year earlier, marking the first quarterly decline since central bank records began in 2004
  • Homebuyers have been taking fewer loans since the first quarter of 2022 as China’s zero-Covid restrictions curtailed property sales, denting demand for borrowings

Reading Time:3 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
3
A homebuyer walking through a construction area in the compound where he bought an apartment in Ningbo in China’s Zhejiang province. Photo: AFP
Zhang Shidongin Shanghai

China’s outstanding mortgage loans dropped for the first time on record, according to the central bank, underscoring the urgency for the government to take more measures to prop the ailing property sector.

Personal mortgage loans shrank 0.7 per cent in the second quarter from a year earlier to 38.6 trillion yuan (US$5.4 trillion), according to the quarterly lending report released by the People’s Bank of China on Friday. That marks the first quarter a year-on-year decline has been registered since central bank records began in 2004. In the first quarter mortgage loans rose 0.3 per cent on year.

Homebuyers have been taking fewer loans since the first quarter of 2022 as China’s zero-Covid restrictions curtailed property sales, denting demand for borrowings. Loans continue to shrink even after the economy emerged from zero-Covid this year, as the economic slowdown and growing unemployment saw a reduction in large-ticket financial commitments.

Advertisement

The unprecedented decline has sparked fears a further deterioration in China’s property market will compound the nation’s already faltering growth outlook and make the job of stemming the slowdown more challenging. While the industry has weathered repeated crackdowns by the government over the past two decades and its contribution to GDP has waned, it remains a critical component of China’s US$18 trillion economy. The property market and related sectors from home appliances to building materials make up about a quarter of the nation’s gross domestic product.

Aerial photography of Fuzhou city scenery panorama. Photo: Shutterstock Images
Aerial photography of Fuzhou city scenery panorama. Photo: Shutterstock Images

“High-frequency data shows that new-home sales remained sluggish in July,” said Yang Zhenyu, an analyst at China Merchants Securities. “The recovery outlook now remains uncertain and the market is awaiting policies that will boost the sector.”

Advertisement

Housing sales have stagnated after a brief rebound earlier in the year spurred by China’s reopening of the economy, with the downtrend spreading even to the bigger cities. Sales of new homes dropped at an annual rate of 5.3 per cent to almost 600 million square meters in the first half, according to the official data, while property investment fell 8 per cent from a year earlier to 5.9 trillion yuan in the same span.

Advertisement
Select Voice
Choose your listening speed
Get through articles 2x faster
1.25x
250 WPM
Slow
Average
Fast
1.25x