China's Biggest Real Estate Broker Spends $2.3 Billion Buying Back Stock as Property Market Struggles

MarketDash Editorial Team
20 days ago
KE Holdings has poured $2.3 billion into share buybacks over three years as China's property downturn hammers profits. Even the country's leading real estate brokerage can't escape the carnage.

There's an old Chinese saying: "When the nest overturns, no egg is left unbroken." It's a pretty accurate description of what's happening in China's real estate market right now, where even the strongest players are getting crushed. Case in point: KE Holdings Ltd. (BEKE), the country's largest property brokerage, just reported another quarter of shrinking profits despite being about as well-run as you can be in this environment.

The numbers tell a sobering story. For all of 2024, KE's revenue climbed 20.2% year-on-year to 93.5 billion yuan ($13.13 billion), which sounds great until you see that profit fell 31% to 4.08 billion yuan. That pattern continued into the first half of this year with revenue up 24% but profit still down 7%. Now even the revenue growth is fading. In the third quarter, the top line barely budged with just 2.1% growth to 23.1 billion yuan, while profit cratered 36.1% to 747 million yuan.

So what's going wrong? KE is caught in a vice. China's property market remains in a prolonged downturn with anemic sales and falling prices, and that's wreaking havoc on the brokerage business model.

The Commission Crunch

Here's the core problem: KE is facilitating more transactions, but making less money on each one. The value of existing home transactions it brokered actually rose 5.8% year-on-year to 505.6 billion yuan in the third quarter. Yet revenue from that segment fell 3.6% to 6 billion yuan. The math doesn't add up because commissions are shrinking fast.

The company is cutting prices everywhere to keep deals flowing. It's waiving platform service fees as incentives, lowering franchise fees for affiliated stores and agents, and paying employees more at its core Lianjia brand shops to retain talent. Meanwhile, cash-strapped developers who are bleeding money are demanding lower commissions on new home sales. All of this is crushing KE's profit margins.

The new home side looks even worse. Transaction values dropped 13.7% to 196.3 billion yuan, dragging revenue down 14.1% to 6.6 billion yuan. When you're losing volume and cutting prices simultaneously, profits take a beating.

The Three Wings Strategy Isn't Flying

KE previously launched what it calls a "one body, three wings" diversification strategy. The "body" is its core brokerage business for existing and new homes. The "three wings" are supposed to be home improvement services, rental operations, and property development.

Spoiler alert: the wings aren't doing much lifting. Home improvement revenue stayed completely flat at 4.3 billion yuan in the latest quarter. Since that business is tied to home sales, it faces natural headwinds when transaction volumes decline. The rental business is performing reasonably well, which is something at least.

The property development wing might actually be a liability. KE is using a consumer-to-manufacturer model with big data for product positioning, which sounds sophisticated but requires heavy capital investment, long development timelines, and delivers modest returns even in good markets. In a prolonged downturn, this segment could easily flip to losses and become a drain rather than a growth driver.

Bottom line: KE's fortunes remain tied to the struggling brokerage business for the foreseeable future, and there's no recovery in sight for China's property sector.

Fighting Back with Buybacks

Facing relentless pressure on its stock, KE has turned to aggressive share repurchases. Since September 2022, the company has bought back approximately $2.3 billion worth of stock, equal to about 11.5% of its float before the program started. This year alone, KE has repurchased $675 million in shares, including $281 million in the third quarter, its biggest quarterly buyback in nearly two years.

The buybacks appear to be providing some stability. While the Hong Kong stock market rallied strongly this year, KE's shares are down about 40% from their 12-month high. Yet over a longer timeframe, the stock has traded in a relatively narrow band between HK$30 and HK$50, suggesting the repurchases are at least putting a floor under the price.

But buybacks only treat symptoms, not the underlying disease. To truly support the stock long-term, KE needs operational improvement, and that's not happening while the property market remains comatose.

Analysts Aren't Optimistic

Wall Street is understandably bearish. UBS recently slashed its 2025-2027 profit forecasts for KE by 24%, 29%, and 27% respectively. The firm also downgraded its recommendation from "buy" to "hold" and cut its target price for the U.S.-listed shares by 14% to $19 from $22.10.

Even after the stock's decline, KE Holdings trades at a forward price-to-earnings ratio of 34 times, with the trailing ratio even higher at 39 times. That's a steep premium, which means significant upside seems unrealistic in the near term. You might see occasional pops when the government announces new stimulus policies, but sustained recovery will only come when the sector genuinely rebounds.

The Long Game

Here's the thing though: KE Holdings has shown remarkable resilience compared to others in China's property sector. Since the market peaked in 2021, the company has mostly stayed profitable and kept growing revenue, even if profits have declined. The fact that revenue continues climbing shows KE is gaining market share, albeit at the cost of lower commissions and margins.

The company's ability to stay in the black through all this chaos, combined with a strong balance sheet, positions it well to weather the storm and benefit enormously once the market recovers. The long-term value proposition is clear. The only question is timing: when will China's real estate sector finally hit bottom? Will it be two years? Five years? Longer?

For investors, KE Holdings represents a bet on China's property market eventually stabilizing. If you believe in that eventual recovery and have patience, the company's market leadership and operational resilience make it an interesting play. Just don't expect quick returns. In a market this troubled, even the best-run companies can only do so much.

China's Biggest Real Estate Broker Spends $2.3 Billion Buying Back Stock as Property Market Struggles

MarketDash Editorial Team
20 days ago
KE Holdings has poured $2.3 billion into share buybacks over three years as China's property downturn hammers profits. Even the country's leading real estate brokerage can't escape the carnage.

There's an old Chinese saying: "When the nest overturns, no egg is left unbroken." It's a pretty accurate description of what's happening in China's real estate market right now, where even the strongest players are getting crushed. Case in point: KE Holdings Ltd. (BEKE), the country's largest property brokerage, just reported another quarter of shrinking profits despite being about as well-run as you can be in this environment.

The numbers tell a sobering story. For all of 2024, KE's revenue climbed 20.2% year-on-year to 93.5 billion yuan ($13.13 billion), which sounds great until you see that profit fell 31% to 4.08 billion yuan. That pattern continued into the first half of this year with revenue up 24% but profit still down 7%. Now even the revenue growth is fading. In the third quarter, the top line barely budged with just 2.1% growth to 23.1 billion yuan, while profit cratered 36.1% to 747 million yuan.

So what's going wrong? KE is caught in a vice. China's property market remains in a prolonged downturn with anemic sales and falling prices, and that's wreaking havoc on the brokerage business model.

The Commission Crunch

Here's the core problem: KE is facilitating more transactions, but making less money on each one. The value of existing home transactions it brokered actually rose 5.8% year-on-year to 505.6 billion yuan in the third quarter. Yet revenue from that segment fell 3.6% to 6 billion yuan. The math doesn't add up because commissions are shrinking fast.

The company is cutting prices everywhere to keep deals flowing. It's waiving platform service fees as incentives, lowering franchise fees for affiliated stores and agents, and paying employees more at its core Lianjia brand shops to retain talent. Meanwhile, cash-strapped developers who are bleeding money are demanding lower commissions on new home sales. All of this is crushing KE's profit margins.

The new home side looks even worse. Transaction values dropped 13.7% to 196.3 billion yuan, dragging revenue down 14.1% to 6.6 billion yuan. When you're losing volume and cutting prices simultaneously, profits take a beating.

The Three Wings Strategy Isn't Flying

KE previously launched what it calls a "one body, three wings" diversification strategy. The "body" is its core brokerage business for existing and new homes. The "three wings" are supposed to be home improvement services, rental operations, and property development.

Spoiler alert: the wings aren't doing much lifting. Home improvement revenue stayed completely flat at 4.3 billion yuan in the latest quarter. Since that business is tied to home sales, it faces natural headwinds when transaction volumes decline. The rental business is performing reasonably well, which is something at least.

The property development wing might actually be a liability. KE is using a consumer-to-manufacturer model with big data for product positioning, which sounds sophisticated but requires heavy capital investment, long development timelines, and delivers modest returns even in good markets. In a prolonged downturn, this segment could easily flip to losses and become a drain rather than a growth driver.

Bottom line: KE's fortunes remain tied to the struggling brokerage business for the foreseeable future, and there's no recovery in sight for China's property sector.

Fighting Back with Buybacks

Facing relentless pressure on its stock, KE has turned to aggressive share repurchases. Since September 2022, the company has bought back approximately $2.3 billion worth of stock, equal to about 11.5% of its float before the program started. This year alone, KE has repurchased $675 million in shares, including $281 million in the third quarter, its biggest quarterly buyback in nearly two years.

The buybacks appear to be providing some stability. While the Hong Kong stock market rallied strongly this year, KE's shares are down about 40% from their 12-month high. Yet over a longer timeframe, the stock has traded in a relatively narrow band between HK$30 and HK$50, suggesting the repurchases are at least putting a floor under the price.

But buybacks only treat symptoms, not the underlying disease. To truly support the stock long-term, KE needs operational improvement, and that's not happening while the property market remains comatose.

Analysts Aren't Optimistic

Wall Street is understandably bearish. UBS recently slashed its 2025-2027 profit forecasts for KE by 24%, 29%, and 27% respectively. The firm also downgraded its recommendation from "buy" to "hold" and cut its target price for the U.S.-listed shares by 14% to $19 from $22.10.

Even after the stock's decline, KE Holdings trades at a forward price-to-earnings ratio of 34 times, with the trailing ratio even higher at 39 times. That's a steep premium, which means significant upside seems unrealistic in the near term. You might see occasional pops when the government announces new stimulus policies, but sustained recovery will only come when the sector genuinely rebounds.

The Long Game

Here's the thing though: KE Holdings has shown remarkable resilience compared to others in China's property sector. Since the market peaked in 2021, the company has mostly stayed profitable and kept growing revenue, even if profits have declined. The fact that revenue continues climbing shows KE is gaining market share, albeit at the cost of lower commissions and margins.

The company's ability to stay in the black through all this chaos, combined with a strong balance sheet, positions it well to weather the storm and benefit enormously once the market recovers. The long-term value proposition is clear. The only question is timing: when will China's real estate sector finally hit bottom? Will it be two years? Five years? Longer?

For investors, KE Holdings represents a bet on China's property market eventually stabilizing. If you believe in that eventual recovery and have patience, the company's market leadership and operational resilience make it an interesting play. Just don't expect quick returns. In a market this troubled, even the best-run companies can only do so much.

    China's Biggest Real Estate Broker Spends $2.3 Billion Buying Back Stock as Property Market Struggles - MarketDash News