Idiosyncratic Risk in China Real Estate: What Does it Mean for the Property Market and Banks?

Earlier this year, we published our views on the China property sector, noting that we expected the government’s credit tightening to partially offset resilient demand in the physical housing market. We also highlighted three themes to watch under the “Three Red Lines” policy, idiosyncratic risks being one of them. Over the past few months, we have seen examples of this idiosyncratic risk emerge, with Evergrande being the most notable. Given recent developments, we have updated our outlook for China real estate and its potential impact on the banking sector.

Physical property market: tight policy and softening demand

We expect the Chinese government to maintain tight property policies that impose greater control on developers’ total debt growth, on banks’ exposure to the property sector, and – through the centralized land auction system – on land price. In addition, with the pandemic continuing to create uncertainty and a slower economic recovery, demand for housing has softened. Despite robust sales growth in 1H 2021, we believe the outlook will be challenging over the next six months.

However, we do not expect systemic risk across China’s real estate sector. Real estate directly contributes 10%-15% of China’s overall GDP growth, making it systemically important to the Chinese economy. Furthermore, most local governments rely on the property market as their largest revenue source. That said, the property development sector is a fragmented market with more than 20,000 operators and we also expect the government to implement selective easing measures to restore homebuyer confidence in order to stabilize nationwide property and land sales if required. While we may see more defaults in the sector, we expect them to be more idiosyncratic in nature and do not anticipate widespread contagion risk.