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Homebuyers at a real estate exhibition
in Dalian, Liaoning Province. The government may raise the interest rate
of mortgage lending to curb the fast rise in house prices and speculation
in the real estate market. (Photo: China Daily) Photo
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BEIJING, Sept. 26 (Xinhua) -- The central bank is likely
to order commercial banks to raise mortgage deposits to at least 40 percent for
homebuyers who intend to buy a second apartment.
Homebuyers will have to make a down payment of 40
percent to buy a second apartment, and for apartments for commercial use, the
down payment will be raised to as high as 50 percent, Wednesday's China Daily
reported.
The minimum deposit for an apartment of more than 90
square meters is currently 30 percent, while for apartments less than 90 square
meters it's 20 percent.
The central bank is also expected to increase the
interest rate of mortgage loans to 1.1 times the benchmark one-year lending rate
this week, the report said.
The move is an attempt to curb the rise in house
prices and speculation in the property market.
The current five-year lending rate has reached 7.83
percent after the central bank raised the interest rate for the fifth time this
year on September 13.
This means the interest rate for five-year mortgage
loans could reach as high as 8.613 percent if the central bank makes a move this
week.
"With the expansion of mortgage loans, and as the
central bank continuously raises interest rates, mortgage loans are beginning to
face a high risk of default," China Construction Bank (CCB), the lender with the
highest mortgage loans in China, was quoted assaying.
Total non-performing mortgage loans in three major
commercial banks - CCB, the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, and Bank of
China - rose to 19.2 billion yuan (2.55 billion U.S. dollars) at the end of 2006
from 18.4 billion yuan in 2005, according to CCB.
The central bank will also require commercial banks
to stop lending to property developers who hoard land and house for speculation
purposes, according to the source.
Property prices in 70 major cities jumped 8.2 percent
in August from a year earlier after gaining 7.5 percent in July, according to
figures from the National Development and Reform Commission.
Housing prices in Beijing rose 12.1 percent from a
year earlier, while prices in Shenzhen went up 20.8 percent.