China Daily

HK housing transactio­ns rebound on eased rules

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

New and secondhand home sales in Hong Kong soared in the first 10 days of March, as property buyers and investors took advantage of the cessation of residentia­l property market tightening measures by the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region government.

Figures from Hong Kong real estate agent Midland Realty showed that new residentia­l unit transactio­ns in the city between March 1-10 skyrockete­d 25 times to 1,660, compared to 64 deals during the same period of February.

Regarding the secondhand housing market, the March 4-10 period recorded 137 transactio­ns for the city’s 35 major housing estates, 18 percent higher than the previous week, marking the highest level in nearly two years.

Sammy Po, CEO of Midland Realty’s residentia­l home business, predicts that new and secondhand home transactio­ns in Hong Kong in March will reach 3,500 and 5,000, respective­ly.

Eric Tso, chief vice-president of mReferral Mortgage Brokerage Services, said the removal of various stamp duties has driven the pace of housing sales among Hong Kong residents with mainland background­s and mainland customers entering the market.

“Among the mortgage applicatio­n cases referred by us, the number of these two types of customers has increased significan­tly by 3.4-fold compared to the period before the scrapping of the cooling measures,” Tso said.

He added that as the government’s talent attraction program will encourage more high-end talent coming to Hong Kong for work and settling down, this will become an important driving force for the future growth of the Hong Kong property market.

The Hong Kong SAR government announced that no special stamp duty, buyer stamp duty or new residentia­l stamp duty are payable for residentia­l property transactio­ns, effective from Feb 28 when the 202425 Budget was unveiled. Sellers and buyers of residentia­l properties, however, are still required to pay ad valorem stamp duties at Scale 2 rates, from HK$100 ($12.8) up to 4.25 percent of the considerat­ion.

Since 2010, the HKSAR has introduced a raft of property market tightening measures to cool down the sizzling housing market, with notable moves in November 2010, October 2012, February 2013 and November 2016.

According to figures compiled by Ricacorp Properties, during the weekend of March 9-10, there were 21 transactio­ns recorded in Hong Kong’s top 10 benchmark housing estates, compared to 31 the previous weekend.

“After the abolition of the tightening measures, some homeowners are optimistic about the market outlook, so they are deciding to increase prices, which contrasts with buyers’ desire for bargains. As buyers and sellers are engaged in back-andforth negotiatio­ns, this has slowed the pace of transactio­ns,” said Ricacorp Properties CEO Willy Liu.

Joseph Tsang, chairman of Jones Lang LaSalle in Hong Kong, expects that after the scrapping of tightening measures, home sales will increase significan­tly by 10 percent to 15 percent in 2024, but home prices will fall 10 percent this year due to high interest rates and a weak economy.

“Abolishing the extra stamp duties for investors and overseas buyers could breathe new life into Hong Kong housing sales, including at leading developers Sun Hung Kai Properties, CK Asset and Henderson Land, which plan to bring new residentia­l projects to market in March,” said Patrick Wong, senior real estate analyst at Bloomberg Intelligen­ce.

According to government figures, the average residentia­l property transactio­n number was 3,584 per month in 2023, representi­ng an annual decline of 4.5 percent.

Land Registry data showed that the number of agreements for sale and purchase of residentia­l building units was 2,375 in February — before the announceme­nt of the end of cooling measures — about 32 percent lower than January.

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