Business Standard

HK, Singapore property will part ways

- ANDY MUKHERJEE

Asmall number of world cities command a big slice of the global property investment pie. That’s both a boon for government­s seeking fiscal nirvana in realestate taxes and stamp duties, and a bane for residents who must battle yield-seeking global capital just to afford their residentia­l and business addresses.

Hong Kong’s real estate investment market is as large as its gross domestic product; Singapore’s half. In most other places, property as a profession­ally managed asset class is a much smaller ratio of output. No wonder that the two economies will be in the crosshairs of global capital again, now that the US Federal Reserve is signalling a higher tolerance for inflation before withdrawin­g monetary stimulus.

The rival financial hubs could again become preferred shelters for cheap money, just as they were during the 2009-2014 period of postfinanc­ial-crisis quantitati­ve easing. Yet there are two good reasons to expect a divergence in their fortunes this time around. The coronaviru­s pandemic’s impact on landlord-tenant relations and the imposition of a Beijing-sponsored national security law in Hong Kong may push the markets to drift apart.

After the outbreak, the Singapore government made it mandatory for commercial landlords, including real-estate investment trusts, to offer a six-month rental moratorium to any merchant requesting it. Small businesses are coming together to demand a fair tenancy law. Hong Kong’s laissezfai­re DNA makes it an unlikely follower of a Singaporea­n-style interventi­onist approach.

Both cities have their unique compulsion­s. Singapore has no choice except to assuage rising anxieties among its virus-hit workforce. After the ruling party’s worst electoral performanc­e since 1965, the government is doubling down on policies that make it harder for firms to hire foreigners. That’s not great news for the private residentia­l market, since the city’s aging local population, already wellserved by public housing, can’t do much to stoke demand.

Hong Kong’s politics, meanwhile, is in the grips of a superpower rivalry, worsened by a national security law imposed after a year of protests. For authoritie­s in Beijing, a vibrant Hong Kong property market may be a defiant display of how the city didn’t miss an economic beat even after the US took away its special trading status.

At the turn of the millennium, 13 per cent of the Hong Kong government’s revenue came from land premiums and stamp duties. Now, the share has ballooned to 34 per cent. Singapore’s revenue is better diversifie­d because of investment returns from its sovereign wealth fund, GIC Pte, and state investor, Temasek Holdings Pte.

Hong Kong’s dependence on property riches can only rise from selling land parcels for a Beijing-sponsored Greater Bay Area, which will connect Hong Kong, Macau and southern China into a seamless economic hub.

Both cities have given landlords Covid-related tax rebates. While Singapore strengthen­ed the holding power of existing owners by raising the leverage limit for real estate investment trusts, Hong Kong has decided to let distressed assets move to new hands and relaxed a loan-to-value ceiling for buyers of shops and offices. Firsttime homebuyers were given the flexibilit­y to borrow up to 90 per cent of an HK$8 million ($1 million) unit last year, a move that may encourage excessive risk-taking once the pandemic shock fades.

More transactio­ns mean more stamp duties, which can be used to repeat this year’s HK$10,000 handouts for adult permanent residents. While that may give the impression that Singapore and Hong Kong are pursuing similar welfarist policies, the reality is that they’re on different paths. Singapore will be wary of losing its balance. Hong Kong may not mind dancing to the music of cheap money, knowing that Beijing won’t let it fall.

Hong Kong’s real estate investment market is as large as its gross domestic product; Singapore’s half

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