China's property downturn deepened through May, with development investment falling at the fastest pace in months and home prices extending a 34-month losing streak.
China's real estate crisis showed no signs of bottoming in the first five months of 2026, as development investment slumped 16.2% from a year earlier to 3.04 trillion yuan and home prices fell for a 34th consecutive month, data from the National Bureau of Statistics showed Tuesday.
"The latest figures confirm that the stabilization seen in March and April was a false dawn," said a Reuters poll published this week, which projects a full-year home price decline of 3.5% for 2026. "The structural headwinds — weak buyer confidence, high inventory, and a slowing economy — are overpowering policy support."
New home sales by area dropped 10.8% year-on-year in the January-to-May period to 313.2 million square meters, while sales value fell 13.5% to 2.94 trillion yuan. New construction starts plunged 22.6% to 179.3 million square meters, signaling developers remain deeply reluctant to commit capital to new projects. Total unsold inventory edged 0.4% lower to 77.2 million square meters at end-May, driven entirely by properties held for less than three years, which fell 2.8%.
The property sector's prolonged contraction carries significant spillover risks for China's broader economy and global markets. Real estate and related industries account for roughly a quarter of China's GDP, and the downturn has already dragged down construction, building materials, and financial services. A Reuters poll projects home prices will fall 3.5% for the full year, with a modest recovery of just 0.3% not expected until 2027.
A Diverging Market With Few Bright Spots
The national averages mask a stark divergence between China's top-tier cities and the rest of the country. Shanghai posted a 3.7% year-on-year price increase, while most smaller cities continued to see values erode. Cumulative declines since the 2021 peak now exceed 12% across many metrics, with the secondary resale market taking an even harder hit than new homes.
Beijing has deployed a broad arsenal of stimulus measures — rate cuts, down payment reductions, purchase restriction removals, and local government property buyback programs — but each round has produced only brief periods of stabilization before fundamental headwinds reasserted themselves. The last time the government launched a major stimulus package in late 2024, new home sales stabilized for roughly two months before resuming their decline.
What This Means for Global Investors
The deepening property slump is weighing on Chinese equities and commodity markets, with developer and materials stocks among the worst performers. The downturn is also pressuring the offshore yuan and dampening demand for industrial commodities such as iron ore and copper. For global investors, the key question is whether Beijing will deploy additional stimulus — and whether it will be enough to break the negative feedback loop between falling prices and weak demand. The next major policy signal could come at the Politburo meeting later this quarter, where further property-sector support measures are expected to be discussed.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.