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No respite in China’s property crisis as new home prices drop for 24th month

Prices in the secondary market fell at a faster pace as analysts say impacts from Beijing’s policy support are waning

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A residential project in progress in Nanjing, Jiangsu province by Poly Real Estate in May 2025. Photo: AFP
Yuke Xiein Beijing

New home prices across major cities in mainland China weakened in May, extending the sequential monthly decline to two years as analysts warned Beijing’s stimulus measures were no longer effective in helping to end the crisis.

Prices in 70 major cities fell 0.2 per cent, following a 0.1 per cent drop in April, according to data published by the government’s statistics bureau on Monday. New home prices retreated 4.1 per cent in May from a year earlier, narrowing from a 4.5 per cent decline in the preceding month, it said.

In the four first-tier cities, prices declined 0.2 per cent after the market stabilised in April, as Beijing, Shenzhen and Guangzhou reported weaker prices while Shanghai bucked the trend. The markets in second- and third-tier cities were also grim as prices fell by 0.2 per cent and 0.3 per cent, respectively, as 53 of 70 tracked cities suffered declines.

“The decline warrants caution,” said Yan Yuejin, vice-president of E-House China Real Estate Research Institute in Shanghai. It could be an early indicator of the waning impact of policy support measures, he added.

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China has been ramping up support for the housing market to reverse a five-year slump, triggered by the government’s policy in August 2020 to control excessive debt among the weakest developers. While Beijing aimed to prevent systemic risk to the system, the campaign fanned a liquidity crunch and loss of confidence among homebuyers.

Those support measures included a liquidity injection to boost lending capacity, funding lifelines for approved housing developers, interest-rate cuts, easier mortgage financing limits and looser requirements for home ownership.

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