Arab Times

Hong Kong retail rents fall sharply in third qtr

Anti-govt protests cited

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HONG KONG, Oct 16, (RTRS): Retail rents in Hong Kong, among the most expensive in the world, fell sharply in the third quarter, property consultanc­y CBRE said on Tuesday, following anti-government protests that have pushed shop sales to a record low.

High street retail rents fell by 10.5% in the July-Sept quarter compared to the previous quarter, CBRE said, the sharpest quarterly decline since the first quarter of 1998 at the time of the Asian financial crisis.

Overall high street rents are likely to decline by another 5-10% over the remainder of 2019, the consultanc­y said.

The Hong Kong protests began in May, in opposition to a bill allowing extraditio­n to mainland China, but have since evolved into broader calls for democracy in the former British colony, with activists throwing petrol bombs, setting street fires and trashing metro stations.

China has accused the West of stirring up anti-Beijing sentiment in Hong Kong and reacted strongly to expression­s of support for the protests.

The landlord of an 11,600 square foot (1,078 sq. m.), threestore­y shop space in Causeway Bay, a prime shopping district, has slashed rent by more than 30 percent, according to realtor Midland IC&I.

The space will be leased for a monthly HK$480,000 ($61,196) to a claw crane arcade this month, down sharply from the HK$700,000 charged from the home appliance chain Fortress before that lease expired last October.

The protests have taken a heavy toll on tourism and consumer spending.

“There’s very few rental transactio­ns; people are not making offers, they’re pessimisti­c about the outlook and want to observe more,” said Daniel Wong, CEO of Midland IC&I.

On the positive side, however, there have not been many lease terminatio­ns yet, he added.

A Midland survey published last month showed vacancy rates in Hong Kong’s four core shopping districts rose only slightly to 6.5% in the third quarter, up from 5.6% a year ago.

The realtor expected rents for core district street shops to decline 10%-15% in the second half, and the vacancy rate to rise to up to 8%-9% next year.

The government said last week at least 100 restaurant­s have closed in the past few months, and has repeatedly urged landlords and property developers to offer rent subsidies to retailers and food and beverage businesses.

MTR Corp, the subway operator which is about 75% owned by the government and itself owns some shopping centres, said it would refund rents and other charges on a pro rata basis to its tenants for the time it shut the stations or centres.

MTR together with major shopping mall developers Henderson Land and Hysan Developmen­t have offered some tenants temporary rental adjustment­s. Henderson and Hysan have also launched promotions to attract retail customers.

Lawrence Wan, senior director of CBRE Hong Kong retail advisory & transactio­n services, said some retailers have negotiated with landlords to restructur­e their lease. That would allow them to pay lower rent for two to three months, and then settle the difference when the business environmen­t stabilises.

 ??  ?? Chinese investors check stock prices at a brokerage house in Beijing on Oct 16. Asian shares
were higher Wednesday after
a gain on Wall Street boosted by healthy earnings reports from US companies. (AP)
Chinese investors check stock prices at a brokerage house in Beijing on Oct 16. Asian shares were higher Wednesday after a gain on Wall Street boosted by healthy earnings reports from US companies. (AP)

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