(Dec 1): Two of China’s private data agencies skipped releasing data on monthly home sales by the country’s top developers, after state-backed China Vanke Co stirred market concerns with its bond extension bid.
China Real Estate Information Corp and China Index Academy, which are among the country’s biggest private property data providers, didn’t disclose the combined sales of the nation’s 100 largest developers for November on Sunday. The two agencies, which usually release the data on the last day of every month, didn’t provide a reason.
The delayed data disclosure comes after Vanke — long considered one of the sector’s healthier firms — sought to postpone repayment on a local bond for the first time last week. Vanke’s surprise move adds to the industry’s woes after years of falling sales and massive defaults by China Evergrande Group, Country Garden Holdings Co, and others.
The missing housing data “could increase uncertainty about the struggling sector’s condition”, Kristy Hung, a senior analyst on real estate at Bloomberg Intelligence, wrote in a Monday note. “The November data would likely show steeper declines.”
Global banks remain pessimistic on China’s property market, which has faced renewed sales weakness since the second quarter. UBS Group AG expects home prices to keep falling for at least two more years. Values of used homes have also dropped sharply, down more than a third from peak levels in major cities, according to UBS.
Fitch Ratings warned last month that new-home sales by area could decline another 15%–20% before the sector stabilises. The bleak outlook suggests banks’ property-related bad debt will likely stay “elevated” next year, Fitch said.
See also: China’s private factory gauge unexpectedly falls as growth cools
China Real Estate Information and China Index Academy didn’t immediately offer comments when reached on Monday.
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