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| A foreigner looks at models of residential
buildings at a property company's sales office in Shanghai. In China's
richest city, the foreigners live in the inner ring, outsiders in the next
and natives in the outermost. [China
Daily] | BEIJING, May 26 (Xinhuanet) -- China's banking
regulatory body has urged commercial banks to take measures to curb the
increasing level of lending in the real estate sector.
China needs to significantly increase down payments
for mortgages on expensive homes and investment properties as part of measures
to rein in bank lending, according to Liu Mingkang, chairman of China Banking
Regulatory Commission (CBRC).
"Commercial banks need to keep a close watch on
borrowers' repayment ability and their credit status."
Liu made the statement at a meeting on Wednesday with
China's major commercial banks. The statement was posted on the commission's
website yesterday.
"Banks should greatly promote loans for first-time
home owners, but stop granting mortgages for anyone other than the home owner.
"It should significantly increase down payments for
those buying anything more than their first home and for expensive properties,
villas, commercial properties and other speculative purchases," the statement
said.
But CBRC did not specify by how much down payments
should be raised.
Property prices in 70 large- and medium-sized Chinese
cities witnessed an average 5.5 per cent increase in the first quarter from the
same period in 2005, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.
The CBRC said it would take a targeted approach to
controlling lending by placing stricter requirements on banks that had capital
adequacy ratios of less than 8 per cent.
It would encourage certain types of property lending,
while restricting others.
As well as targeting property lending, the commission
said it was asking banks to stop arranging set quotas of loans with local and
provincial governments - a major source of lending since the start of the year.
Much of the money has gone into fixed investment in
property and other assets.
The CBRC's move was seen as an attempt to keep
China's rapid growing economy from overheating.
Last month the central bank raised the one-year
benchmark lending rate by 27 base points to 5.85 per cent in a bid to curb
credit and investment growth.
China reported total loans of 20.6 trillion yuan
(US$2.575 trillion), up 14.7 per cent over the previous year, at the end of the
first quarter.
The central bank recently denied reports that it was
considering increasing down payment to 50 per cent from 20 per cent.
Liu's comments follow a six-point directive issued by
the State Council last week requiring government agencies to rein in what many
have called runaway property price increases in some cities.
An executive meeting of the State Council chaired by
Premier Wen Jiabao vowed to take necessary measures to improve the property
market and curb rapid price rises in major cities.
(Source: China Daily) [1] [2] [3] [4] |