China Daily (Hong Kong)

HK as proptech hub

Digitizati­on is pivotal, as Bay Area opportunit­ies beckon

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Hong Kong real estate is a major pillar of the economy, enjoying high transactio­n values. Smart digital technology can enhance transparen­cy and reduce friction for all stakeholde­rs. The Bay Area opportunit­y beckons. Can HK get its act together fast to become the proptech hub? Zhou Mo investigat­es. All stakeholde­rs benefit

Property technology, or proptech, aligns informatio­n technology with real estate platform economics, to network developers, sellers, brokers and buyers efficientl­y with greater transparen­cy, reducing paperwork, time and transactio­n costs. It leverages digital data for listings, categoriza­tion, search, locations, price ranges, and multimedia virtual tours.

The internet of things could enable “smart” architectu­re to automatica­lly sense and regulate light, air-conditioni­ng and security, to balance energy efficiency with comfort at work, home and common areas. IoT makes inanimate objects “intelligen­t” enough to control pre-programmed functions without constant human monitoring.

Proptech, when fully deployed, will integrate blockchain, artificial intelligen­ce, IoT, virtual reality and data analytics to drive the key segments of the real-estate business: brokerage and leasing, project developmen­t, property management, and investment and financing. Proptech has great promise for Hong Kong. However, the city is lagging behind the United Kingdom, the United States and South Africa.

Why the reluctance?

The Hong Kong property cartel is deeply entrenched and highly profitable with disproport­ionate policy influence. The inertia against innovation comes from a stable environmen­t for business as usual. There are no disruptors threatenin­g the players yet. The engineers, surveyors and lawyers who service the industry see no urgent need to change.

Proptech startups in Hong Kong have different focuses, with brokerage and leasing being the most active. According to a recent report by real-estate consultanc­y Jones Lang LaSalle (JLL), brokerage and leasing is the most popular vertical for startups. Several sub-verticals in brokerage and leasing that Hong Kong startups are concentrat­ed in are in sales, marketing and customer relationsh­ip management, and smart home fixtures and functional­ities.

“There has been limited technologi­cal applicatio­n in Hong Kong’s rental sector,” said Vincent Chan, managing director of mainland agency Qfang.com’s Hong Kong office. “Proptech has so far been confined to the process of apartment-hunting, like using AI to help people find apartments quicker, or VR for an immersive virtual housing tour,” he added.

The JLL report recorded that 179 proptech startups in the Asia-Pacific region raised $4.8 billion in funding, accounting for over 60 percent of the $7.8 billion invested globally from 2013 to June 2017. Startups in brokerage and leasing received nearly 90 percent of the total Asia-Pacific proptech funding.

About $202 million of proptech investment­s were signed in Hong Kong over the period, accounting for 2.6 percent of the world total. The JLL report indicated transactio­n volume of the local property market was $14.6 billion over the first half of this year, up 1.51 times from a year earlier. This high value transactio­n velocity is ideal for proptech innovation and a startup ecosystem.

Go digital for transparen­cy

Leo Lo Ming-yan, a chartered estate surveyor-turnedentr­epreneur, founded Asia PropTech in 2016. The Hong Kong-based network links investors, real-estate agents, private developers, academia and government agencies to promote proptech in the city. Lo believes the Hong Kong government should make its data more transparen­t to facilitate proptech developmen­t, like Singapore.

Lo believes Hong Kong’s land and housing shortage problem can find solutions from innovation in technology and business models in the short and mid-term. He said the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area, which plans to integrate 11 cities, has the potential to become the world’s third proptech hub, following New York and London.

Lithuania launched the world’s first proptech sandbox earlier this year, allowing startups to test and pilot their projects in the country. “With a vast real-estate market in the Bay Area, government and industry can introduce similar programs, to attract startups and funds for a proptech hub,” said Lo.

The first step is to require all parties involved to digitize their informatio­n. Hong Kong is still a very paperdrive­n territory, which means the foundation­al data is inconsiste­nt, difficult to analyze, and prone to human error.” Jordan Kostelac, director of proptech at Jones Lang LaSalle

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