BEIJING: China’s Central Bank cut interest rate by 25 basis points that took one year loan rate to 5.35 percent and longer term loans rate up to five years to 5.75 percent.
The second interest rate reduction in three months was not primarily targeted at supporting the housing market, but the sector will benefit anyway through lower borrowing costs for developers and home buyers seeking mortgages.
The industry had been hoping for further rate reductions. Developers noted that average home loan rates remained high at 6.25 percent as of the end of 2014, only fractionally down from 6.54 percent at beginning of the year.
The central bank’s rate cut in November sparked a brief home buying surge in the fourth quarter. But as the impact wore off, concerns arose that without more policy stimulus, the fragile recovery could turn into a rout.
According to E-house China R&D Institute, home sales in 30 cities in February declined 46.5percent month-on-month and 11.3 percent year-on-year, the weakest record in 36 months. Although the Chinese Lunar New Year holiday played a major factor, there is also wide spread concern about conditions this month.
Renewed price declines last month added to the worry. According to the China Index Academy, a private researcher, the average new home prices in 100 cities that it monitors fell by 0.24 percent month-on-month, compared with a gain of 0.21 percent in January.
The academy noted that after the latest rate cut, the interest rate for long-term loans has fallen to a 10-year low. That will be a bonus to homebuyers.
For example, if a typical homebuyer bought a 2 million yuan house and borrowed 70 percent of the money from banks, he could pay 80,000 yuan ($12,800) less in total interest, or 226yuan less per month.
Both the academy and E-house forecast a significant boost in sales in March, as prospective buyers returned to big cities after the holiday, market sentiment improved and developers rolled out more projects for sale.
But E-house analysts said that home sales and prices in smaller cities were unlikely to get the same lift as in big cities because of significant oversupplies there.