Off the wire
China's housing market not Japan's 1980s bubble: minister  • Official confident rundown-housing renovation target to be met  • Urgent: Presidential election starts in Myanmar  • Xiamen customs seize hundreds of tonnes of smuggled meat  • Roundup: U.S., Russia divided over Iran's missile launch at UN Security Council  • Tokyo stocks edge lower in morning on investor caution ahead of BOJ meeting outcome  • Rolling Stones to make triumphant return to Mexico  • Aussie dairy giant to ramp up infant formula production to satisfy Asian demand  • Xinhua China news advisory -- March 15  • Venezuela extends economic emergency for another 60 days  
You are here:   Home

1st LD-Writethru: China's property market to remain steady, healthy: official

Xinhua, March 15, 2016 Adjust font size:

China's property market will continue to experience steady and healthy development thanks to sound economic fundamentals and enormous housing demand, an official said Tuesday.

"I am confident in the development of the sector," Minister of Housing and Urban-Rural Development Chen Zhenggao told a press conference on the sidelines of the annual parliamentary session.X He cited several favorable factors including stable economic growth, the rapid pace of urbanization and huge demand from the urban population.

China's property market has shown signs of warming since the middle of last year, reversing the 2014 downturn, but new problems are emerging, including soaring prices in metropolises and an inventory backlog in medium and small-sized cities.

There were 739 million square meters of unsold homes by the end of February this year, up 15.7 percent year on year.

To address the issue, policymakers identified the reduction of housing inventory as one of the top priorities for this year, and announced a slew of measures, such as reduced levies and lower deposits.

Responding to a question on home purchases by migrant workers, Chen said favorable measures would be rolled out to help them buy homes, find jobs and settle down in cities.

Agricultural Bank of China issued loans worth 17 billion yuan (around 2.5 billion U.S. dollars) in January to home-buying migrant workers, Chen said. Endi