# Property Market
Latest news and articles about Property Market
Total: 5 articles found

Shanghai’s Property Market Signals a Fragile Rebound as Prices Defy National Downturn
Shanghai's real estate market is showing signs of a localized recovery, with second-hand home sales projected to hit a multi-month high of 25,000 units in June. While the national market struggles, developers in Shanghai's core and sub-core districts are successfully raising prices on new projects, signaling a flight to quality among buyers.

Teeth and Thorns: China’s New Financial Czar Signals Aggressive Shift in Risk Management
The NFRA, under new leadership, has announced a stringent regulatory agenda focusing on preventing defaults in small banks and stabilizing the property sector through 'white list' financing. The strategy emphasizes 'teeth and thorns' enforcement and a pivot from scale-driven growth to high-quality financial stability.

Shanghai’s Property Thaw: A Policy-Driven 'Red May' Signals a Strategic Market Pivot
Shanghai's real estate market hit a six-year high in secondary transactions this May, driven by the 'Shanghai Seven' policy stimulus and a revival of the property replacement chain. The market is transitioning from a period of deep discounting to a phase of price and volume stability, with inventory levels falling to three-year lows.

China’s Fiscal Pivot: Tax Windfalls Mask a Deepening Property Drag
China's broad fiscal revenue returned to growth in early 2026 as surging tax receipts offset a catastrophic 27% decline in land sales. The data reveals a strategic shift in Beijing's spending priorities, moving away from property-led growth toward social welfare and technology-focused investments.

China’s Fiscal Balance: A Tale of Two Realities as Stock Market Frenzy Masks Property Pain
China’s fiscal revenue grew 3.5% in early 2026, buoyed by a 74.8% surge in stock trading taxes, while local governments faced a 27.2% collapse in land sale revenues. The data highlights a widening gap between a volatile financial sector and a struggling property market, forcing a shift in state spending toward social welfare.