Zinger Key Points
- Weak home sales data hits China's ailing real estate sector.
- PMI data suggests a weakening Chinese manufacturing industry.
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Chinese stocks fell sharply on Tuesday, led by a fragile-looking real estate sector, following data that showed continuing weakness in the country’s property market.
The Hang Seng Index in Hong Kong fell 1.6% on Tuesday. The iShares MSCI China ETF MCHI, an exchange traded fund that tracks some of China’s biggest stocks, was down 1.8% in pre-market trading in New York, despite having little exposure to the property sector.
Among the major decliners on the Hang Seng Index were Longfor Properties, down 7%, and China Resources Land, which fell 5.4%. Data on the performance of American depository receipts in Longfor Group Holdings ADR LGFRY and China Resources Land ADR CRBJY were delayed ahead of the market open in New York.
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Property Supply Remains High, Demand Low
Data from the China Index Academy, an independent real estate research company, showed that average daily home sales during the last week in December fell by 26% compared with the same period a year ago.
The researchers said: “The supply capacity and willingness of real estate enterprises are insufficient, and the approved listing area of commercial housing in 50 representative cities has decreased by more than 10% year-on-year.”
“Both sides of the market supply and demand weakened, the saleable area fell back but remained at a high level, and the clearance period was extended to 19.6 months. The year-on-year decline in the area of new housing starts is still large, and the year-on-year decline in the construction area continues,” the researchers added.
Weakening Manufacturing
On top of the continuing weakness in property stocks, the latest official purchasing manager survey from China’s National Bureau of Statistics showed that manufacturing in China slowed for a third-consecutive month in December, leaving the purchasing manager index (PMI) at 49, down from 49.4 in the prior month.
This contrasted, however, with PMI data from Caixin Bank, which showed the index inched up from 50.7 in November to 50.8 in December. A PMI reading below 50 indicates economic contraction.
Caixin noted, however, that employment declined significantly, while market optimism weakened on lower expectations for future output.
“Factors such as consumer budget constraints, intense market competition and uncertain global economic prospects continued to be the primary concerns for manufacturers,” said Dr. Wang Zhe, senior economist at Caixin.
China Yuan Falls
The Chinese yuan suffered its biggest daily sell off in six months following the data.
The yuan fell by 0.6% against the dollar ($CNY) on Tuesday, following a strong run against the greenback in the last two months of 2023. However, the dollar remained up around 3.4% over the past year.
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