(Bloomberg) - For investors accustomed to carefully calibrated official messaging on the Chinese property market, the statement this week from authorities in Heilongjiang was remarkable: It called for “all out efforts” to promote the real estate industry’s growth -- by far the strongest show of support for the embattled sector by a provincial-level government.
Then, not long after screen shots of the statement began pinging across trading desks on Tuesday, it quietly disappeared from Heilongjiang’s WeChat account and government website.
The episode has injected a fresh dose of volatility into China’s property sector, whipsawing share prices as investors struggle to gauge the government’s commitment to a crackdown on speculative homebuyers and highly leveraged developers.
Hopes that the Heilongjiang statement might signal an acceleration of recent measures to dial back this year’s crackdown sent a gauge of Shanghai-listed property stocks up 3.8% on Tuesday to the highest level since June. That optimism faded after the statement’s removal, with the index falling 1% on Wednesday.
“It’s hard to say whether this can be read as a signal of easing in the property sector,” said Castor Pang, head of research at Core Pacific-Yamaichi International Hong Kong Ltd. “But one thing is for sure, Beijing is not going to just let the developer crisis explode. On the stocks front, it’s obvious that investors are hyping any news or headlines, even if it’s incremental, and they will take profit very quickly.”
While multiple city governments in China have issued supportive comments and policy tweaks on the property sector in recent weeks, higher-level authorities have been comparatively measured in their communication.
China will “support the commercial housing market to better meet buyers’ reasonable housing needs,” and build more subsidized housing, the official Xinhua News Agency said earlier this month after a meeting by the Communist Party’s elite Politburo chaired by President Xi Jinping. Senior officials have continued to use the phrase “houses are for living in, not speculation,” suggesting a reluctance to dramatically reverse restrictions on the sector.
Against that backdrop, the statement from Heilongjiang province stood out. “It’s a strong policy signal,” Yan Yuejin, research director at E-house China Research and Development Institute, said before the statement was removed. “Earlier supports for the property market were scattered, mostly giving out home-buying subsidies, but the Heilongjiang government offered a package to underpin the entire property market.”
The news office of Heilongjiang’s provincial government couldn’t be immediately reached for comment. Calls to the local housing regulator weren’t answered. The government’s statement was reported earlier by Chinese media outlets Jiemian and Cailian.
The news sent more than 20 Chinese property and construction stocks jumping by the 10% daily limit on Tuesday. Volume for Shenzhen Heungkong Holding Co. -- a small developer based in southern China, was the highest in almost four years.
Mainland-based traders also piled into Hong Kong-listed developers through cross-border exchange links. They bought a net HK$258 million ($33 million) of Sunac China Holdings Ltd. shares on Tuesday, making it one of the most actively traded securities in the stock connect. Hong Kong derivatives traders snapped up bullish Sunac call options, with volume in one January contract surging almost 600%.
The question now facing investors is how much weight to place on the deleted Heilongjiang statement. Jiang Liangqing, managing director at Zhuhai Greenbamboo Private Fund Management, said provincial and local authorities are likely to continue easing property curbs while being less vocal about the changes.
“I’m not surprised at all that it got taken down,” Jiang said of the Heilongjiang statement. “However, this doesn’t change the fact that Heilongjiang will persist in its drive to shore up the market, and other provinces are already doing so, even if they are more discreet about it.”
That optimistic view got some support in state-backed media on Wednesday, with the China Securities Journal reporting that developer fundamentals are starting to improve and their share valuations are likely to continue recovering. More than 20 cities have rolled out local measures to stabilize the property market, the newspaper said in a separate article.
By Bloomberg News