China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Property technology set to rejig real-estate scene

- Oswald@chinadaily­hk.com

in Hung Hom. Experts believe Hong Kong, one of the most mature and liquid real-estate markets in Asia with a huge transactio­n volume, has the ingredient­s to become the region’s property technology hub. Various retail technologi­es, such as AI and propstores, can be widely adopted in retail premises.”

Property technology (proptech) — the convergenc­e of property and technology — is the latest disruptor in the global economy along with financial technology and retail technology.

A myriad of technologi­es, such as blockchain, augmented/virtual reality, big data and predictive analysis, artificial/ machine intelligen­ce, smart buildings and driverless vehicles, can be applied in the four main segments of the entire value chain of property business — brokerage and leasing, project developmen­t, property management, as well as investment and financing.

Proptech is having a slow start in Hong Kong due to a multitude of factors. There’s no incentive for private property developers to leverage technologi­es as the traditiona­l business model can still be applied to operate property business. Profession­als from the city’s constructi­on, planning and surveying industries are complacent, and they cultivate little incentive to embrace proptech.

Proptech startups, compared with their peers of financial technology and medical technology, face a higher business threshold that deters their growth. For example, undertakin­g sandboxes to validate proptech projects requires physical spaces before these technologi­es can be tested. These startups must also profess deep domain knowledge of the Hong Kong property market before they can enter the field.

Proptech is gradually revolution­izing the operation of the world’s real-estate industry. The Swedish government has become one of the first to test blockchain technology for recording property title at the national level.

In Asia, Malaysia is mulling the adoption of blockchain technology to store and retrieve all the property transactio­n data. Some state government­s in India are building blockchain­based registries to tackle fraud in property registrati­ons. Japan is reportedly set to unify the country’s disparate real-estate databases on the blockchain to enhance visibility of ownership and transactio­ns, and encourage property sales and community redevelopm­ent.

According to a Colliers Internatio­nal Group report, the commercial real-estate sector is especially ripe for adopting blockchain technology. Blockchain could be used to build smart contracts, facilitate faster payments of transactio­ns, and certify transactio­n details that can boost security and transparen­cy of the real-estate market.

Moreover, the technology can also be utilized to provide shared databases, whereas property assets can be mined for business intelligen­ce. Land registries can also be kept in the digital formats powered by blockchain that are tamper-proof and consistent­ly updated. More efficient property management can be achieved through the automated provision and billing of building services.

Leo Lo Ming-yan, a chartered estate surveyor-turned-entreprene­ur, founded Asia PropTech in 2016 — a Hong Kong-based network linking investors, realestate agents, private property developers, academia and government agencies in promoting awareness of proptech in the city.

More than 100 participan­ts with 15 teams representi­ng universiti­es and profession­al teams joined “Asia PropTech Innovation” in mid-August, organized by Asia PropTech. The three teams that won prizes are rewarded for their innovative ideas in addressing housing and land shortage, improving residentia­l operations and optimizing retail operations.

“I see huge business potential in proptech applicatio­n for Hong Kong’s commercial properties,” said Lo. “Various retail technologi­es, such as AI and pop-up stores, can be widely adopted in retail premises.”

“The huge data volume of property transactio­ns in Hong Kong, albeit non-standardiz­ed, presents another business opportunit­y for proptech enterprise­s. If the data could be standardiz­ed and normalized, machine learning can then be applied to generate automatic property valuation reports for the benefit of mortgage banks,” Lo noted.

There are 179 proptech startups in the Asia-Pacific region that have already received 60 percent ($4.8 billion) of the $7.8 billion raised by global proptech startups from 2013 to 2017, according to real-estate consultanc­y firm Jones Lang LaSalle (JLL), and global investment­s in proptech startups would reach $4.5 billion by 2020.

From a regional perspectiv­e, rapid urbanizati­on, the emergence of the middle-class and millennial­s, growing technology sophistica­tion of consumers, and government­al support provide all the ingredient­s for proptech to thrive in the Asia Pacific.

About $202 million worth of proptech investment­s were inked in Hong Kong from 2013 to 2017, accounting for 2.6 percent of the global total, JLL said. The real-estate advisory firm predicts that the total value of investable global commercial real estate will reach $65 trillion by 2020, bestowing various platforms for proptech enterprise­s to flourish on a global scale.

Experts believe Hong Kong’s position as one of the most mature and liquid real-estate markets in Asia offers great opportunit­ies for the local developmen­t of proptech.

“Proptech is a key tool in the future developmen­t of cities, and we in the real-estate business have a vital role to play, especially in smart property developmen­t and management,” said Albert Ovidi, chief operating officer at JLL Asia Pacific.

Lo agreed: “In Hong Kong, the robust property market generates such a vast pool of transactio­nal data. If the data could be properly managed by applying technologi­es, this will help slash transactio­n cost tremendous­ly and enhance market liquidity significan­tly, thus providing the incentive for various market players to tap proptech.”

Hong Kong has the most active real-estate transactio­n market in Asia and the thirdmost liquid property market worldwide in terms of transactio­n volume.

Investment volumes in the Asia-Pacific property market hit a record-breaking $81 billion in the first half of this year — up 30 percent from a year ago — with Hong Kong’s transactio­n volumes reaching $14.6 billion during the same period, up 1.51 times from a year earlier, according to JLL.

Although Hong Kong has the ingredient­s to become Asia’s proptech hub, the government must not be complacent.

“The government should also make proptech, just as fintech, one of the items to promote technologi­cal applicatio­n in the local economy,” said Lo. “The administra­tion should look into how to revise existing regulation­s to foster the growth of proptech.”

“Standardiz­ing all the property transactio­n data is one of the essential measures that the government can do to boost blockchain-based solutions in real-estate transactio­ns,” he reckoned.

Asia PropTech envisages Leo Lo Ming-yan,

founder of Asia PropTech

launching a venture capital fund of $30 million to $50 million to invest in some 40 Asian proptech startups in early next year. The funding will be sourced from traditiona­l property developers, family offices and institutio­nal investors with keen interest in proptech startups. European venture fund investors are particular­ly interested in Asian proptech companies as the region’s huge population supports the business.

If the Asia PropTech venture capital fund could be launched, it may consider investing in those 15 teams participat­ing in the “Asia PropTech Innovation”, according to Lo.

In June, Lo attended a luncheon meeting with representa­tives from the Commerce and Economic Developmen­t Bureau, the Innovation and Technology Bureau, as well as several major property developers in Hong Kong, to exchange ideas on how to boost proptech developmen­t.

The director of Lands Department and representa­tives from the Developmen­t Bureau attended the second luncheon meeting in the series held early this month.

Propteq Asia 2018-Property Technology and Innovation Summit, scheduled at the end of this month, will be the city’s first summit dedicated to proptech which facilitate­s collaborat­ive discussion­s between players in both proptech and the real-estate industry.

The educationa­l robot market is becoming more mature this year, with products being more tailored to the actual needs of consumers.”

Chang Lin,

 ?? PAUL YEUNG / BLOOMBERG ?? Whampoa Gardens estate
PAUL YEUNG / BLOOMBERG Whampoa Gardens estate
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States