数据显示 我国一线城市房价涨幅连续回落
The growth of home prices in China's key cities slowed for nine consecutive months to end of June, with prices in the capital actually falling, as the country's moves to cool the residential housing market continued to gain traction, according to official data. The National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) reported that average home prices in Beijing fell for the first time in more than two years in June. It said Shanghai home prices declined 0.2% month-on-month, while Shenzhen home prices stalled in June, and Guangzhou's grew 0.5%, which was lower than the 0.9% gain in May. "China's 15 hottest property markets, mostly first and second-tier cities, remained stable in June as a city-based property policy continued to take effect," the NBS said in a statement. The price growth of newly built residential properties in key cities in China slowed down in June, and home prices in some 90% of the 70 cities monitored saw month-on-month declines or stayed unchanged, according to the monthly report on home prices across China by the NBS. Liu Jianwei, senior statistician at the NBS, said city-specific policies have been taking effect across China. More than 40 cities have launched a wide range of measures to cool down overheating in the home market since October last year, including higher down payment requirements for buyers of second homes, and restrictions on reselling homes. "On a year-on-year comparison, in all of the 15 key cities, including first-tier and some regional gateway second-tier ones, prices declined in June by somewhere between 0.8 percent and 5.5 percent," Liu said. |