Home prices continue to climb in China
Updated: 2014-01-18 11:31
(Xinhua)
|
|||||||||||
A potential homebuyer takes a photo of a property display model in Beijing. [File photo / China Daily]
|
Home prices in major Chinese cities continued to climb despite repeated government efforts to cool the sector, official data showed on Saturday.
Of a statistical pool of 70 major Chinese cities, 65 saw a month-on-month rise in new home prices and 64 reported price gains in existing and second-hand homes in December last year, the National Bureau of Statistics announced in an online statement.
More cities saw price growth easing in December, a result the senior NBS statistician Liu Jianwei attributed to a raft of government efforts to stabilize market expectation, including more control measures and increasing supplies of affordable housing.
Monthly price gains in Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenzhen retreated 0.1 percentage point, 0.1 percentage point, 0.1 percentage point and 0.4 percentage point, respectively, from those seen a month earlier.
On a yearly basis, all the cities but Wenzhou reported gains in new home prices.
First-tier cities continued to lead rises last month, with the prices of new homes in Beijing and Shanghai surging over 20 percent from a year ago, but Liu said the trend has been losing momentum.
Real estate a real problem | |
|
|
Related Stories
Restraining home price rise won't be easy 2014-01-07 07:19
2014 to bring home price divergence: Forum 2013-12-27 17:23
Home prices continue to rise in November 2013-12-19 08:14
Home prices continue monthly rise 2013-12-18 11:07
China home prices continue to rise in Nov 2013-12-18 10:27
Today's Top News
The party is over for SOEs conferences
Obama's spying overhaul proposals too weak
Voters approve Egypt new constitution
Home prices continue to climb
Pressure rises on treating China's pollution
Beijing wants to attract more foreign experts
Looming baby boom no sweat: officials
Dumpling appetites grow after Xi drops in
Hot Topics
Lunar probe , China growth forecasts, Emission rules get tougher, China seen through 'colored lens', International board,
Editor's Picks
Entertainment: Console ban? |
Majoring in anti-money laundering |
Traditional skiing lives on as fur flies |
Shangri-la assets lost forever after town blaze |
US police all a-twitter about Weibo |
Movie mogul Run Run Shaw, 107, dies in HK |