May 2, 2024

News and Political Commentary

Hong Kong property stocks jump after city scraps cooling measures

2 min read

An urban view of high-rise buildings at dusk as seen from Hong Kong’s Victoria Peak.

Nurphoto | Nurphoto | Getty Images

Stocks of Hong Kong developers rose after Financial Secretary Paul Chan scrapped property cooling measures in a bid to bolster the sector, which has been weighed down by high borrowing costs and weak economic sentiment.

In his budget speech on Wednesday, Chan announced that Hong Kong will withdraw all buy-side tightening measures for residential properties and waive stamp duties payable on the transfer of REIT units with immediate effect.

The Hang Seng Property index jumped 2.4% following the announcement, but has since slipped from session highs, while the broader Hang Seng index fell 1.47%. New World Development shares jumped as much as over 8% before currently trading at 4%, and Hysan Development added 0.3%. Sun Hung Kai Properties and CK Asset rose 1.35% and 0.55% respectively, while Henderson Land Development traded 3.83% higher.

Hong Kong’s housing prices, once the most expensive in the world, have plunged almost 20% since their peak in 2021 on the back of rising interest rates and dimmer market sentiment.

Hong Kong budget: Real estate expert discusses the scrapping of property curbs

The sale and purchase agreements for all building units in 2023 fell 2.7% from a year ago, according to the city’s Land Registry. Sales were also nearly 40% lower than 2021. The government’s home price index also declined for the ninth straight month in January, falling 1.57%.

“With these reductions in stamp duty, I think we’ll see certainly a fairly quick pickup and transaction volumes,” Peter Churchouse, managing director of Portwood Capital, a leading real estate investment company. “Then towards the back end of the year, we might start to see a little bit of a pickup in property prices.”

Up until recently, the city imposed a 7.5% stamp duty on non-permanent residents purchasing property as well as additional properties purchased by permanent residents. The rates for both levies were slashed from 15% in October.

Churchouse added that this…



2024-02-28 01:59:00

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