China Ramps Up Property Support With $56 Billion in New Funding
#1

Bloomberg - Chinese regulators told the nation’s second-tier banks to dole out another 400 billion yuan ($56 billion) of financing for the property sector in the final two months of the year, adding to a raft of support measures that have stoked recent gains in the beleaguered industry’s stocks and bonds.

The money -- in the form of loans, mortgages and bond investments -- adds to the $85 billion of net financing that the country’s six largest lenders were told to extend in September, people familiar with the matter said, asking not to be identified as the matter is private.


The People’s Bank of China and the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission didn’t immediately reply to requests for comment.

China’s financial policymakers are stepping up efforts to arrest the slump in the country’s property sector, after measures from interest rate cuts to subsidies failed to revive growth. A crackdown on the real estate sector has led to a string of bond defaults and residential construction halts that have angered homebuyers. China’s home prices sank for a 13th month in September.

The latest financial support, along with signs of easing pandemic restrictions, have led to a sharp rebound in China assets. A Bloomberg Intelligence gauge of Chinese developers’ stocks jumped a record 18% Friday, with Country Garden Holdings Co. surging 35%.

Chinese authorities have eased home ownership rules, trimmed interest rates and urged banks to step up lending in a bid to turn around the ailing property market, which remains a drag on the world’s second-largest economy.

China also expanded a key financing support program designed for private firms including real estate companies to about 250 billion yuan this week, a move that promises to help developers sell more bonds and ease their liquidity woes.

Still, the financial backstop is dwarfed by the looming debt maturities facing developers. China’s property sector has at least $292 billion of onshore and offshore borrowings coming due through the end of 2023. That includes $53.7 billion in borrowings this year, followed by $72.3 billion of maturities in the first quarter of next year.
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#2

(11-11-2022, 10:28 PM)Blasterlord2 Wrote:  Bloomberg - Chinese regulators told the nation’s second-tier banks to dole out another 400 billion yuan ($56 billion) of financing for the property sector in the final two months of the year, adding to a raft of support measures that have stoked recent gains in the beleaguered industry’s stocks and bonds.

The money -- in the form of loans, mortgages and bond investments -- adds to the $85 billion of net financing that the country’s six largest lenders were told to extend in September, people familiar with the matter said, asking not to be identified as the matter is private.


The People’s Bank of China and the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission didn’t immediately reply to requests for comment.

China’s financial policymakers are stepping up efforts to arrest the slump in the country’s property sector, after measures from interest rate cuts to subsidies failed to revive growth. A crackdown on the real estate sector has led to a string of bond defaults and residential construction halts that have angered homebuyers. China’s home prices sank for a 13th month in September.

The latest financial support, along with signs of easing pandemic restrictions, have led to a sharp rebound in China assets. A Bloomberg Intelligence gauge of Chinese developers’ stocks jumped a record 18% Friday, with Country Garden Holdings Co. surging 35%.

Chinese authorities have eased home ownership rules, trimmed interest rates and urged banks to step up lending in a bid to turn around the ailing property market, which remains a drag on the world’s second-largest economy.

China also expanded a key financing support program designed for private firms including real estate companies to about 250 billion yuan this week, a move that promises to help developers sell more bonds and ease their liquidity woes.

Still, the financial backstop is dwarfed by the looming debt maturities facing developers. China’s property sector has at least $292 billion of onshore and offshore borrowings coming due through the end of 2023. That includes $53.7 billion in borrowings this year, followed by $72.3 billion of maturities in the first quarter of next year.

China's houses are in a sorry state of affairs. Developers are in a 600 billion dollars debt, and cannot continue to build the unfinished homes...... crying
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