This city near Shanghai just imposed property curbs—again

Fourth batch of cooling measures this year for Suzhou

Dushu Lake in Suzhou, Jiangsu province, China. zhangyuqiu/Shutterstock

Housing authorities in the mainland Chinese city of Suzhou announced Wednesday another batch of cooling measures on the overheated property market, the South China Morning Post reported.

Broadening its jurisdiction to include the counties of Kunshan and Taicang, the local government increased Suzhou’s tax return period to two years. The tax return period is a requirement for non-resident buyers of homes in the city.

The new round of property curbs is “harsher” than market observers expected, according to Yan Yuejin, a research director with E-house China R&D Institute.

“It signals that [Chinese President Xi Jinping’s edict] of ensuring that housing is for living, not speculation will remain the theme that anchors property policies for the rest of the year. There is no hope for any significant change in housing policy.”

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Justifying the government’s latest moves are incendiary prices in Suzhou’s Industrial Park, a coveted address with some of the city’s best schools and workplaces. Suzhou on the whole is located close to Shanghai, making it an inherently attractive location for property investors.

New home prices in the Suzhou industrial park leaped 8.6 percent in the first half of 2019 to CNY36,212 yuan (USD5,270) per square metre, close to those in Shanghai, the Post noted, citing E-house data.

Prices in Xiangcheng district also skyrocketed 22.7 percent in H1 2019.

“The tightening policy in Suzhou certainly does not bode well for the Politburo’s stance on the property sector,” CCB International Holdings’ analyst Siu Fung Lung told the Post. “The policy is shifting toward a hawkish stance, from the more lenient statement of stabilising home, land price and market expectation in early 2019.”

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