Homebuyers officially resign as China's primary creditors
This decline accelerated compared to the full 2025 year. This marks a real change in buyer behaviour, not seasonal variation.
What happened
The primary funding mechanism for Chinese infrastructure has seized. New home sales value dropped 20.2%, and investment fell 11.1%. Crucially, the "internal float" developers used to bridge their debts has vanished because the people who usually provide that cash (homebuyers) no longer believe the product will be delivered.
Why it matters
Real estate has been the engine of Chinese economic growth for 20 years. A sustained 11% drop in investment, combined with a 42% collapse in mortgage lending, signals that the government's stimulus measures are not reversing the sector's contraction — they are just slowing it. The data shows the problem is structural, not cyclical: developers are not building because buyers are not buying, and buyers are not buying because they no longer believe prices will rise. This is the opposite of a confidence problem that money can fix. Watch whether the government escalates stimulus in the next quarter or accepts slower growth as the new baseline.
The signal
The liability has migrated. The numbers in this report prove that the risk of unfinished housing is no longer being carried by the individual citizen; it has moved onto the public balance sheet. When buyers stop paying for the "idea" of a third floor, the government is forced to pay for the reality of it.
The catch State-owned banks might simply reclassify developer loans to avoid marking them to market.
China reports that office building completions dropped by fifty-two percent while office space sales actually rose. Buyers are apparently paying top dollar for the conceptual idea of a third floor.