The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

HK property scion says social housing a top priority

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HONG KONG: Adam Kwok, the young executive with the keys to Hong Kong’s largest property empire, sees tackling the city’s housing crisis as a top priority.

Kwok’s family company, Sun Hung Kai Properties Ltd, announced it will lease three plots of land in the New Territorie­s to non-government­al organisati­ons for eight years for a nominal sum of HK$1.

The donation will yield around 2,000 apartments for low-income families waiting for public housing, helping to ease pressure in the world’s least affordable real estate market.

“When any decent-minded person sees these new immigrant families, just people lining up, living in these subdivided units in the city, you would have a heart for them,” the 36-year-old tycoon said in an interview ahead of Friday’s announceme­nt.

“Especially us being in the situation, we can do quite a lot more.”

Hong Kong is notorious for its sky-high home prices. Unaffordab­le housing has forced many into dire living conditions, residing in steel container boxes, illegal industrial sites or apartments the size of a car-parking space. The government estimates that more than 200,000 people live in small subdivided units and one in five residents is below the poverty line.

Since the anti-government protests began in June, local property developers – almost all of them owned by billionair­e families – have been criticised by Chinese state media as land hoarders and blamed for pushing up the cost of real estate. That’s partially fuelling young people’s rage.

Kwok said this particular project started in June, before the protests erupted, and so wasn’t related to the demonstrat­ions. He declined to be drawn on the current political situation.

“I think when you see the project, not only the launch announceme­nt, but the thought we put behind it, you’ll see that it’s something we put our heart into,” he said. An executive director at Sun Hung Kai, Kwok is responsibl­e for leading the firm’s property-developmen­t businesses.

At Us$35.8bil, the Kwok family is Hong Kong’s wealthiest clan, according to a Bloomberg Billionair­es Index ranking of Asia’s richest families. Their empire is also among the most exposed to the city’s anti-government protests.

Late last month, Wheelock Properties Ltd announced similar plans to donate land that can be used to build apartments for people waiting for public housing. Rivals New World Developmen­t Co, controlled by the Cheng family, and Henderson Land Developmen­t Co, controlled by the Lee clan, took the initiative earlier to give away plots.

Hong Kong’s richest man, Li Ka-shing, of CK Asset Holdings Ltd, has offered Hk$1bil (Us$129mil) to help small and medium-sized businesses impacted by the protests. — Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Kwok: You’ll see that it’s something we put our heart into. — Bloomberg
Kwok: You’ll see that it’s something we put our heart into. — Bloomberg

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