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China’s housing market: Boom or bubble?

(2010-05-25 02:53:21) 下一個
Enormous investment opportunities lay in the emerging superpower, says Cityscape Asia 2010

China holds enormous opportunities for investment as its economy surges, say leading economists and investment experts at Cityscape Asia 2010 in Singapore yesterday.

Speaking at a keynote session on evaluating the economic outlook for China 2010 and beyond, David Wong, Chief Economist at Shui On Land, said the Asian giant is a market that investors can no longer afford to ignore.

“China is undisputedly growing in relevance. Early government intervention and lower levels of debt compared to its western counterparts helped it to weather the financial storm better than most.”

Since October 2008, the Chinese government has implemented aggressive macroeconomic expansion policies, along with fiscal stimulus packages and monetary expansion. These policies have led to the rapid recovery of the domestic market and also signs of a recovery in investment.

The rapid growth in the China economy has led to a 8.7% per cent annual economic growth rate in 2009. Among the world’s major economies, China is surging at an unmatched pace with 10 per cent growth forecast for 2010.

Wong said this indicates huge room for rapid, catch-up growth and thus investment opportunities.

Indeed, the Chinese’s domestic demand contributed 12.6% points to GDP growth in 2009 – the country’s strongest performance since the early 1990s.

With the rebound of the housing sector playing a prominent role in this recovery, the discussion has now moved to whether China is harnessing a housing boom, or bubble. Wong continued: “The current upswing is resulting in unprecedented liquidity easing after the global financial crisis and so there are some recent housing market developments that appear symptomatic of a bubble.

“Sales have nearly doubled over the past year, housing credit has increased sharply, and the price of houses in the secondary market has accelerated rapidly. Yet from an affordability standpoint, property prices appear expensive and seem to have factored in a certain amount of future income growth.”

Ample saving deposits of residents have helped to support mortgage lending, as well as contributing to China’s substantial property market boom.

Wong said: “Conventional wisdom holds that if China maintains its phenomenal economic growth, then last year’s loans need not turn bad. The asset bubble is no longer a major economic risk with the new tightening policies. Further, property market cooling measures will not derail economic recovery but enhance sustainability of future growth.

“Therefore there are enormous opportunities for investing in China’s long term growth and resurgence as the emphasis changes from growth speed to growth quality,” Wong concluded.

20 May 2010

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