Hong Kong housing market shows no signs of cooling

epa06000622 Workers walk through the podium garden of the Tin Ma Court housing estate in Kowloon, Hong Kong, China, 31 May 2017. According to local media reports, residents of Tin Ma Court are unsatisfied the new property managers of the housing estate since ownership of Tin Ma Court passed from the public sector to the private sector. Complaints of residents include dried up ponds and other water features, poor sanitation, broken escalators, plants in public areas dying from lack of water, overgrown plants and trees, as well as mature trees being cut for no apparent reason.  EPA/ALEX HOFFORD

Bloomberg

Hong Kong’s red-hot housing market shows no signs of cooling anytime soon. Prices in the city have climbed 11 percent this year, defying skeptics waiting for the bubble to burst and government attempts to rein in the world’s most expensive housing market through a raft of taxes and mortgage curbs.
If anything, the frenzy has intensified in recent months as investors have poured money into property. Buyers have set new records for everything from luxury homes in the exclusive Peak neighbourhood to undeveloped residential land. There have also been blockbuster deals for commercial property in the heart of Hong Kong’s central district.
“Now it is very hot, because of the hot money rushing in,” said Raymond Ho, deputy senior director of residential development and investment at Savills Plc. “There is more record-breaking coming.”
Runaway growth has put the city in bubble risk territory, according to the UBS Global Real Estate Bubble Index. Even so, mass-market home prices will rise 8 percent to 10 percent next year, according to property consultancy Colliers International Group Inc. Real estate consultant Knight Frank LLP expects prices of such homes to climb 5 percent next year, while luxury housing advances 8 percent.
An average 20,000 new private residential units come to market each year, barely enough to cover the 20,000 mainland Chinese who become permanent residents each year—allowing them to avoid the punitive stamp duties slapped on foreign buyers—let alone anyone else.
Cash-rich developers are pulling out all stops to entice buyers. At its Cullinan West project, Sun Hung Kai Properties Ltd. is offering buyers finance of as much as 120 percent of the purchase price: 90 percent towards buying the new property, and 30 percent to pay down their existing mortgage. More than 95 percent of the 321 units offered over the weekend sold, Sun Hung Kai said. They were priced about 11 percent higher than a March sale at the same development, according to BOCOM International Holdings Co. Other developers offer rebates to buy furniture or interest-only loans for the first three years.
In a sign that mortgage wars between banks are raging even amid the prospect of rising interest rates, HSBC Holdings Plc is offering to match low rates from rival lenders. Hong Kong’s largest mortgage lender is offering some clients a rate of Hibor plus 1.28 percent if they get similar terms from other banks. That works out to less than 2 percent. “These rates are highly affordable and will continue to be, even if the US pushes up rates 25 or 50 basis points,” said Marcos Chan, senior director of head of research for Hong Kong, Southern China and Taiwan at CBRE Inc.
The biggest obstacle for new home buyers is coming up with the minimum 40 percent down-payment required by Hong Kong Monetary Authority loan-to-value ratios. Step in the Bank of Mom and Dad. Hong Kong’s de-facto central bank has warned young buyers are increasingly turning to their parents, with home purchases being financed partially by proceeds from refinancing mortgages.

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