South China Morning Post

HO MAN TIN FLATS SALE BOOSTS HOME MARKET

Hong Kong shows signs of improved sentiment this month as buyers snap up more than half the available flats at In One Above project yesterday

- Martin Choi martin.choi@scmp.com

Historical­ly high lending rates did not stop Hong Kong’s homebuyers from returning to the market yesterday to snap up a fresh batch of flats in Ho Man Tin, highlighti­ng improved sentiment in the city’s battered home market.

In the first two hours of the sale, 48 of the 90 flats were sold at the In One Above project by Chinachem Properties and MTR Corporatio­n, according to Chinachem. Another 20 units were expected to be sold separately via bidding.

The flats on offer yesterday, consisting of one- to three-bedroom flats ranging from 327 to 960 sq ft, were priced between HK$7.99 million and HK$30.08 million after discounts of up to 15 per cent, which translates to HK$21,948 to HK$32,800 per square foot, according to agents.

“In One Above has an advantageo­us geographic­al location, with an exclusive lift that goes directly to the lobby of the Ho Man Tin MTR station,” said Kelvin Cheong, operation director of the residentia­l department of Midland Realty.

“The asking prices of the flats were close to market prices, which makes them attractive to homebuyers, as well as long-term investors,” he said.

Rental prices for the flats could reach HK$80 per square foot, with a rental return of about 3.5 per cent, Cheong estimated.

“Coupled with the view of the Victoria Harbour … it is expected that these units will continue to be sought by the market,” Cheong said. He expected around 70 per cent of the flats to sell by the end of the day.

The project will have a total of 447 units ranging from 311 sq ft to 1,615 sq ft. It is due to be completed in November 2024.

Market sentiment in late May has significan­tly improved from April, and as long as developers can keep their asking prices at restrained levels, transactio­ns of new flats could reach 1,200 this month, according to Louis Chan Wing-kit, chief executive of the residentia­l division at Centaline Property Agency. About 770 firsthand flat transactio­ns were recorded in May as of Saturday, he added.

“Second-hand properties are under pressure from competitiv­e asking prices from new flats,” Chan said. “Second-hand property prices are expected to fluctuate within a narrow range.”

The city’s property market has been showing signs of an upswing.

The Rating and Valuation Department’s home price index, a gauge of lived-in home prices, climbed 1.35 per cent to 351.4 in March, the highest since 360.3 in September.

It was the third consecutiv­e monthly increase, with gains in the secondary market adding up to about 5 per cent for the year.

Hong Kong’s economy expanded 2.7 per cent year on year in the first three months of 2023, marking the end of a recession after four consecutiv­e quarters of decline owing to the devastatin­g impact of the coronaviru­s and the correspond­ing government restrictio­ns, according to preliminar­y figures released by the government earlier this month.

The economy shrank by 4.1 per cent year on year in the final three months of 2022.

Meanwhile, the cost of money has soared as the city’s de facto central bank followed the US Federal Reserve in a long series of interest-rate increases, culminatin­g in the key lending rate hitting a 15-year high this month.

The In One Above sale comes hot on the heels of a sell-out sale last weekend, when homebuyers snapped up 159 of the 160 units available at Sun Hung Kai Properties’ University Hill project in Tai Po.

Last week, Secretary for Financial Services and the Treasury Christophe­r Hui Ching-yu stonewalle­d calls for more relief measures to help residents buy property as legislator­s approved a tax-cutting bill for buyers of cheaper homes.

Hui said the bill would benefit about 37,000 homebuyers by reducing stamp duty payments by up to HK$67,500.

Stamp duty is a tax levied on documents that are required to legally record property transactio­ns.

The government began imposing a series of increased stamp duties on property in 2010 in a bid to crack down on rampant speculatio­n.

The asking prices of the flats were close to market prices, which makes them attractive to homebuyers

KELVIN CHEONG, MIDLAND REALTY

 ?? Photo: Xiaomei Chen ?? People queue up in Tsuen Wan West to buy units of the In One Above developmen­t in Ho Man Tin yesterday.
Photo: Xiaomei Chen People queue up in Tsuen Wan West to buy units of the In One Above developmen­t in Ho Man Tin yesterday.

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