China’s property market has ‘not found a bottom’ yet, Standard Chartered CEO Bill Winters says

China’s property market has ‘not found a bottom’ yet, Standard Chartered CEO Bill Winters says


China's property market has 'not yet completely bottomed out,' Standard Chartered CEO says

China’s property market has still not found a bottom despite all the turmoil in the past year, according to Standard Chartered CEO Bill Winters.

Speaking to CNBC’s JP Ong, Winters described the investing environment in China as “difficult,” explaining that consumer confidence and international investor confidence was relatively low.

“We know that the underlying source of a lot of the confidence questions is the property market, and the property market has not yet completely bottomed out, so it’s been a slow grind down,” he added.

Winters pointed out, “there are some signs from time to time that we’re seeing an increase in activity, but at the same time, it doesn’t feel like we’ve really found a true bottom in terms of price.”

The danger, he said, is that a property market bubble that bursts in other markets has usually portended a financial crisis, and that is normally accompanied with more significant falls in GDP.

China posted 4.7% growth in the second quarter from a year ago, down from 5.3% in the first quarter and its lowest since the first quarter of 2023.

Last week, Bank of America cut its GDP growth forecast for China to 4.8% for 2024 from 5% earlier, and also trimmed its forecasts to 4.5% for both 2025 and 2026, down from 4.7%.

Beijing has made several moves to try to stimulate the economy, including cutting loan rates and most recently, allowing homebuyers to refinance their home loans so as to free up money for consumption.

Winters explained that the reason China has not launched a massive stimulus program is because the country saw what other countries did during the first wave of Covid, which saddled economies with sharply higher debt levels.

“I think we’re seeing these continuous, small stimulus programs, monetary and fiscal policy, driven to make sure that we don’t get into really a bad spiral that it would be difficult to recover from… Our expectation is that the stimulus will be enough, but not excessive,” he said.

As such, he thinks that it will be a bit uncomfortable in the short term, but fiscally, “that’s going to be a good thing.”

Trump's tariff proposals on China would be a 'lose-lose situation,' economist says

Separately, Hao Hong, partner and chief economist at GROW Investment Group told CNBC’s “Street Signs Asia” there are no signs of strong policy stimulus just yet.

While he said that “we can only guess” as to the reason why Beijing has not unleashed any massive stimulus, he thinks that China is holding back from major policy stimulus because of structural and circular downward pricing pressure that it is encountering in the property sector.



Source

EU says TikTok and Meta broke transparency rules under landmark tech law
World

EU says TikTok and Meta broke transparency rules under landmark tech law

In this photo illustration, iPhone screens display various social media apps on the screens on February 9, 2025 in Bath, England. Anna Barclay | Getty Images News | Getty Images The European Commission, the executive arm of the European Union, said on Friday that it had preliminarily found both TikTok and Meta in breach of […]

Read More
European stocks higher as earnings buoy sentiment; Saab up 4.5% amid defense boom
World

European stocks higher as earnings buoy sentiment; Saab up 4.5% amid defense boom

LONDON — European stocks opened in positive territory on Friday amid a slew of earnings reports.   The pan-European Stoxx 600 was 0.1% higher at 8:43 a.m. in London (3:43 a.m. ET), though sectors and bourses were mixed. The U.K.’s FTSE 100 and Italy’s FTSE MIB were around 0.1% higher in the first hour of […]

Read More
AI, private credit, inflation: Global fund managers reveal their top concerns heading into year-end
World

AI, private credit, inflation: Global fund managers reveal their top concerns heading into year-end

Fund managers are taking a cautious stance as the fourth quarter gets underway, opting to go underweight in risk assets in favor of defensive plays with lower volatility. AI, private credit, sticky inflation — and the Fed’s ability to deal with it amid interference from U.S. President Donald Trump — are top of mind for […]

Read More