Hong Kong home sales surge on weekend after curbs lifted

The Hong Kong government last week took major steps to boost the ailing property market by loosening mortgage rules and removing all extra taxes. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

HONG KONG – Hong Kong’s property market saw the best weekend in a year after the government lifted decade-long curbs on home buying.

The financial hub’s 10 biggest estates recorded the most sales in 61 weeks with 27 transactions, 3.5 times higher than the previous weekend, according to Midland Realty, which tracks the data as a gauge of second-hand market sentiment.

The new-home market is just as robust.

Henderson Land Development’s project Belgravia Place in Kowloon sold all of the 138 units on offer in a mere four hours on March 3, the company said.

That is after the apartments received more than 4,400 applications to purchase them, meaning the units are 31 times oversubscribed.

While the sales are a boost to market sentiment, most analysts expect the medium-term outlook to remain challenging due to high interest rates, ample inventory and a weak economy.

Shares of Henderson Land climbed as much as 3.4 per cent on the morning of March 4. Its peer Sun Hung Kai Properties rose as much as 3 per cent. Henderson Land shares closed flat at HK$22.40 while Sun Hung Kai shares closed 1.7 per cent higher at HK$80.80 on March 4.

“Hong Kong’s urgency to restore vigour to its wheezy housing market is evident in its latest, decisive steps,” Mr Patrick Wong, a Bloomberg Intelligence analyst, said in a note on March 4.

“It could take the heavy artillery of interest-rate cuts to relight the fire that drives investment demand.”

The government last week took major steps to boost the ailing property market by loosening mortgage rules and removing all of the extra taxes designed to cool demand.

Non-residents do not have to pay a combined 15 per cent tax when purchasing properties, while owners can sell their homes at any time without paying a special duty.

The sales of all the units available at Belgravia Place are “rare in recent months”, Mr Sammy Po, chief executive of the home division at Midland Realty, said in a statement.

“We can see that the buyers’ speed to enter the market is accelerating.”

Mr Po expects first-hand transactions in March to reach the highest in a year.

There were also buyers who purchased several units in one go, with one snapping up four apartments for a combined HK$18 million (S$3 million), Henderson added.

Buyers no longer need to pay 7.5 per cent tax when they own more than one home, compared with the standard tax rate that is capped at 4.25 per cent. BLOOMBERG

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