China Daily (Hong Kong)

HK retains the world’s ‘costliest homes’ crown

SAR outranks more than 400 major cities as the most expensive property market for seventh consecutiv­e year

- By OSWALD CHAN in Hong Kong oswald@chinadaily­hk.com

Hong Kong has kept the dubious honor of being the world’s most expensive housing market for the seventh year running, outranking 406 other major metropolit­an regions.

According to US-based Demographi­a’s annual internatio­nal housing affordabil­ity survey, the SAR is the least affordable city globally to buy a home, with average homes prices in 2016 standing at 18.1 times the median annual gross household income.

W h i l e t h a t ’s a m o d e s t improvemen­t in affordabil­ity compared with 19 times in 2015, Demographi­a considers a score of more than 5.1 as “severely unaffordab­le”.

H o n g K o n g ’s m e d i a n multiple “represents a substantia­l deteriorat­ion in its housing affordabil­ity”, Demographi­a said in the report, citing a median multiple of 11.4 times in 2010.

Ho n g Ko n g — t h e o n l y city in China included in the survey — saw homes prices in November 2016 hit an all-time high, as the private residentia­l price index traced by the Rating and Valuation Department had soared for eight consecutiv­e months and surged 4.5 percent on a yearly basis.

T he city ’s prices for secondary homes, which account for about 70 percent o f t h e t o t a l v o l u m e , h av e soared almost 40 percent since Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying took office in July 2012, and went up a further 7.7 percent last year — hover- ing just 2.6 percent shy of the record reached in September 2015.

The dearth of affordable housing has been a longstandi­ng headache for Hong Kong despite a raft of taxes and mortgage caps introduced by the government in the past few years.

The government raised the stamp duty for homes transactio­ns to 15 percent for all residentia­l purchases in November last year, except for first-time buyers who are Ho n g Ko n g r e s i d e n t s , i n another desperate attempt to rein in the runaway property sector following a raft of similar measures implemente­d since 2010.

“Those macro-prudential measures have proved that they ’re still unable to curb Hong Kong’s soaring homes prices because the global macroecono­mic environmen­t is still good, and local buyers can still afford mortgage loan repayments even though the US had raised interest rates recently,” said Marcos Chan Kam-ping, senior director at global real estate advisor y firm CBRE.

“The local homes market, however, has grown healthier as these measures, which include requiring banks to conduct a stress test of a 300 -basis-point hike, make only those homes buyers w i t h s u ff i c i e n t f i n a n c i a l strength to be eligible for buying a home in the city,” he said.

The US federal funds rate hike in December 2015 — the second in a decade — has p u s h e d d o w n Ho n g Ko n g financial markets as the city’s mortgage loan interest

The local homes market, however, has grown healthier as these measures, which include requiring banks to conduct a stress test of a 300-basispoint hike, make only those homes buyers with sufficient financial strength to be eligible for buying a home in the city.”

rates will likely follow suit this year. A spike in mor tgage loan rates definitive­ly will dent the mortgage loan capability of local homes buyers.

Elevated Hong Kong property valuations have also put the city ’s economic growth a t r i s k . T h e In t e r n a t i o n a l Monetary Fund warned that stre tched proper ty valuations mean that Hong Kong’s economy is vulnerable if interest rates rise faster than expected.

According to the Demographi­a survey, Sydney held on as the second-costliest housing market worldwide, with a median multiple of 12.2, followed by Vancouver, with Auckland in fourth place.

Bloomberg contribute­d to the story.

 ??  ?? Marcos Chan Kam-ping,
Marcos Chan Kam-ping,

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