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Hong Kong Housing May Be Headed for a Correction

Published 2018-11-04, 04:00 p/m
Updated 2018-11-04, 09:48 p/m
© Bloomberg. Residential buildings stand illuminated in Hong Kong, China, on Saturday, July 21, 2018. Hong Kong's property market has a habit of humbling the bears, shattering predictions that the laws of gravity must eventually prevail. Photographer: Paul Yeung/Bloomberg

(Bloomberg) -- Signs of a housing market downturn in Hong Kong are spreading after the city’s first interest-rate increases in 12 years and an escalation in trade tensions between China and the U.S.

“We’re now in a correction like the one we had during 2015 to 2016,” said Cusson Leung, JPMorgan Chase & Co (NYSE:JPM).’s head of property and conglomerates research in Asia, citing buyers’ fears for the outlook of both the Hong Kong and Chinese economies.

Home prices fell 13 percent during that downturn versus a decline of about 3 percent so far this time around. Five weeks after banks raised rates, here are several signs of a faltering market.

1. Mortgage Applications Plummet

Applications recorded the biggest month-on-month drop in 20 years in September, according to Centaline Mortgage Broker Ltd. The number of applications slid 56 percent to 7,977, the Hong Kong Monetary Authority reported.

Ivy Wong, managing director at Centaline Mortgage Broker, cited banks’ readjustments of new mortgage rates in August as something that played a key role in the decline to the lowest level in 30 months.

2. Luxury Sales Plunge

In one well-publicized anecdote, a buyer forfeited an estimated HK$54.2 million ($7 million) deposit after walking away from a deal to buy a house on the Peak. That’s only part of the picture, with September seeing the fewest luxury home transactions in data going back to 2005, according to agency Ricacorp Properties Ltd. That consisted of 36 sales out of a total of 35 developments tracked by the firm.

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“A lackluster stock market and the China-U.S. trade war have led to a wait-and-see attitude for both investors and end-users,” said Derek Chan, Ricacorp’s head of research.

3. Agents Take a Holiday

Midland Realty, one of Hong Kong’s biggest property agencies, had some news for its 100 worst-performing staff last month. The bottom 10 will have to leave, the next 55 will be asked to take leave without pay for at least three months and the remaining 35 are having their performance closely monitored.

Midland, which has more than 4,000 agents in total, said while that’s a policy that’s long been in place, it will be strictly enforced from this month.

4. Price Cuts

A drumbeat of newspaper reports and statements from agencies show substantial price cuts for sales of individual properties. A two-bedroom apartment in Kowloon Bay went for 28 percent -- or HK$1.9 million -- less than the asking price in August, Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) Daily reported late last month. Another two-bedroom unit in a nearby district sold for 17 percent less. According to Centaline Property Agency Ltd., that seller was willing to lower the price by HK$1.7 million, after some negotiation.

5. Tumbling Sales

The value of new-homes transactions for October stood at HK$11.2 billion as of Oct. 28, the lowest level in 16 months once holiday distortions are excluded. The number of transactions was 1,130, down by almost half from the total for all of September, data from Midland Realty show.

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