People wearing face masks are seen on an overpass in front of a residential building in Beijing, China August 11, 2020.
Investors may get their first read on the market reaction when official property investment and price data for August is released next month.
It was not the curbs that were holding the market down, they said, but Chinese doubts about better days ahead.
While not bullish on real estate, she thinks of big-city properties as a "slightly bruised apple amidst a bunch of rotten ones."
"I'm concerned about the change," said a 26-year-old pharmaceuticals worker surnamed Song, who had considered buying a property in Beijing before realising he needed his parents' support.
Persons:
Tingshu Wang, Kate Ren, hasn't, Ren, Ting Lu, Sophia Chen, Chen, Zhuran Zhang, Zhang, Song, Liangping Gao, Ella Cao, Shuyan Wang, Marius Zaharia, Sam Holmes
Organizations:
REUTERS, Nomura, Investors, July's Communist Party, Reuters, Thomson
Locations:
Beijing, China, BEIJING, HONG KONG, Shanghai, China's, Zhengzhou, Hangzhou