The state took action and stopped selling land!
On May 3rd, a new policy for the real estate market took a series of remarkable measures:
For cities with a de-conversion period of more than three years, the government will stop adding new land supply.
According to the current data, 41 cities across the country are facing such a situation, including some hot cities, such as Wuhan.
As we all know, in the second half of 2015, the destocking policy, housing prices rose sharply, and housing prices in many cities even doubled.
The real estate destocking policy does help alleviate the oversupply situation in the real estate market, reduce inventory pressure, and stabilize market expectations.
But given the current overall trend in the real estate market, can this policy really trigger a skyrocketing in housing prices?
In this regard, netizens are also hotly discussed.
"It's useless, the people have no money, and there is only one way to reduce the price. "If you don't build it for ten years, you can't digest the inventory. ”
"It rose to 1 million square meters, and everyone sat at home to eat, anyway, they were all billionaires. ”
"I'll buy it when it's up 10 percent. It will lose 10%, and it will cost 80% to copy it halfway up the mountain. ”
"Nationalize the surplus cages and rent them to low-income families in the form of public rental housing, killing two birds with one stone"
Can this destocking policy really save the decline of the real estate market?