1 / 49

Property Markets

Property Markets. HONG KONG. Hong Kong Property Market. Influence of Government – Leasehold land tenure system Principal generator of land supply Disposals – application list system Lease modifications Agencies – URA, MTRC, KCRC Dependence on land revenues

Patman
Download Presentation

Property Markets

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Property Markets HONG KONG

  2. Hong Kong Property Market Influence of Government – • Leasehold land tenure system • Principal generator of land supply • Disposals – application list system • Lease modifications • Agencies – URA, MTRC, KCRC • Dependence on land revenues • Major owner and until recently provider of social housing

  3. A More Predictable Property Market? • Shift from trading to investment mentality • More comprehensive long term approach to planning and land use • Land supply driven policy • Non intervention by Administration • Re-think of housing policy • Market largely driven by fundamentals

  4. Market Overview - Residential • Ultimate barometer of Hong Kong’s well being • In recovery mode but is it sustainable? • Three markets within a market plus public housing sector • Potential issues relating to supply in 2006-2007 • Vulnerability to increases in interest rates • Speculation at top end

  5. Hong Kong :Home Ownership – private sector • Traditionally builds 25,000 – 35,000 units per annum • Land obtained through purchase / lease modification • In lead up to 1997 prices driven by speculative attitude and opportunity to make quick profit, not aspiration to own one’s home • Post 1997 market collapse – values fell by some 65%. Most families in negative equity • Correction lasted for best part of 6 years, now seeing market revival driven by fundamentals

  6. Total Stock of Private Residential Units by Class in Hong Kong Class D (53,646 units) Class E (24,112 units) Class C (110,624 units) Class A (361,243)units) Class B (501,137 units) Classification of Residential Units by Class : Class A - saleable area less than 40m² Class B - saleable area of 40m² to 69.9m² Class C - saleable area of 70m² to 99.9m² Class D - saleable area of 100m² to 159.9m² Class E - saleable area of 160m² and above Sources: Rating and Valuation Department

  7. Hong Kong Residential Market (Overall) Supply, Take-up & Vacancy Sources: Rating and Valuation Department, HKSAR & Insignia Brooke

  8. Hong Kong Residential Market Annual Price Indices (1999 = 100) Sources: Rating and Valuation Department, HKSAR & Insignia Brooke

  9. Hong Kong Residential Market Annual Rental Indices (1999 = 100) Sources: Rating and Valuation Department, HKSAR & Insignia Brooke

  10. The Leighton Hill, Happy Valley

  11. Housing the Community • The role of Government • Stabilising society • Facilitation • Financial support • Social need • The role of the private sector • Responding to market demand • Assisting Government with physical provision

  12. Hong Kong : Home Ownership – Public Sector • HA provided 649,000 pr flats for 2,019,000 persons representing 30% of Hong Kong’s population • Sold 405,500 flats through various subsidised home ownership schemes • Provided over 100,000 loans for flat purchasers • Built 2.26M sq m of commercial/retail space and 100,000 car parking spaces

  13. Hong Kong – Government Housing in 1970

  14. Hong Kong : Wind of Change (I) • HA supply intended to complement / augment private sector but at times of high unaffordable prices HA became prime producer and competitor of private sector • Up to 100,000 units per annum at peak. Sold at discount from market value, quality good • Collapse of property market. Private sector now affordable. Rebellion by private sector producers

  15. Hong Kong :Wind of Change (II) • Government now exited subsidised purchase provision and focus is to facilitate cost effective provision of quality public rental housing • Also move away from physical provision to financial assistance and entrusting private sector developers with building units which are then allocated to nominated Government buyers / tenants. Voucher system rather than physical provision under serious consideration

  16. Modern Public Housing

  17. Market Overview - Office • Relatively weak demand continues • Wide range of choice • Move back to Central • Few new entrants to market • Grey space disappeared but essentially a case of musical offices • Main rental movement restricted to Grade A and Central

  18. Supply, Demand & Vacancy in Prime Areas New Supply & Take-up (net sq ft) Vacancy Rate (%) * As of September 04 Source : CB Richard Ellis Limited

  19. Hong Kong

  20. Market Overview - Retail • Strongest market sector, fuelled by Mainland visitors • Traditional areas of Causeway Bay & Tsim Sha Tsui in demand • Re-emergence of strata title investors • Re-configuration of 1st and 2nd floor podium space to retail use • HA REIT initiative

  21. The Arcade, Cyberport

  22. New Retail Property REIT • Link REIT to be launched in Hong Kong in mid-December • First Hong Kong REIT and one of biggest launches this year • 151 Housing Authority shopping centres and 79,000 carparks valued at US$4 billion

  23. Market Overview – Other Sectors • Interest in 2/3 star hotels, fuelled by Mainland tour groups • Hotel occupancies up, but room rates still not back to pre SARS level • Conversion of industrial sites to hotel and guest house use. • General business zoning failed to rekindle interest in industrial stock • Loft experiment also unsuccessful

  24. Market Prices and Yields • Residential 1. Mass Market US$6,500 per sq.m. 2.Luxury US$13,000 per sq.m. Yield 3-4% net • Office (Grade A) US$9,000 per sq.m. Yield 5% net • Retail (Zone A) US$50,000 per sq. Yield 6% net

  25. Market prices and yields (continued) • Industrial US$1,500 per sq.m. Yield 8-9% net • Hotel (3/4 star) US$500,000 per room Yield 7%

  26. The Market Players • Those for whom real estate is a significant part of their business • Property Developers • Property Investment companies and funds • Banks – funders of and lenders to real estate sector • Service providers • Contractors • Government

  27. Health Warnings (I) • Continued Government involvement • Lack of meaningful institutional investor pool • Trading mentality still prevails • Lack of sophisticated asset management expertise • Failure to resolve long term policy/strategy issues • Harbour • Heritage • Sustainability • Urban Renewal

  28. Health Warnings (II) • Absence of successful P/P model • Potential volatility of supply • Lack of joined up thinking • Need for strategic planning authority • No account yet taken of intangible returns

  29. S.W. Kowloon – Aerial View

  30. S.E. Kowloon – The Existing Platform

  31. MTRC Mission To develop and manage a world class railway together with property and other related businesses, to enhance the quality of life in Hong Kong. We are a company that builds and operates railways and designs and builds communities.

  32. Facts & Figures • Total route length : 88 km • Total no. of stations : 49 • Daily hours of operation : 19 hours • Total no. of passengers in 2003: 842M Average daily patronage : 2.3M (with a record high of 3.1M onChristmas Eve 2002)

  33. MTRC Portfolio by Railway Lines Urban Lines 234,898 sq m 299,363 sq m 31,366 flats Development Total GFA:2.6 million sq. m. Management 28,729 flats 126,490 sq m 130,367 sq m Airport Railway 611,968 sq m 307,880 sq m 28,896 flats 294,072 sq m Development Total GFA:3.5 million sq. m. Management 254,190 sq m 46,170 sq m 13,345 flats Legend Office Retail Residential Hotel/Service Apt Tseung Kwan O Line Total GFA:2.3 million sq. m. Development 103,130 sq m 132,014 sq m 28,800 flats

  34. Kowloon Airport Station - MTRC

  35. Brown v/and Green Debate • Challenge of multiple ownership in urban areas • Attraction of green field approach • Ever growing demand for city living • Rural to urban migration • Absence of, and a reluctance to use, compulsory mechanisms • Growing attention to quality of life capital • Reducing pressure on existing infrastructure

  36. Urban Regeneration Area

  37. Ma On Shan, Shatin

  38. Allocation of Development Gains • Differentiation between capital gain attributable to market forces and a direct increase in land value attributable to an administrative decision • No taxation of capital gain • Increases in value arising from planning decision or lease modification are shared, but reasonable allowance made for developer’s profit and for the before value of the asset • Payable at time of decision in full. Focuses the mind, but subsequent increases in value accrue to the developer only

  39. Tuen Man New Town South

  40. Historical Background – New Towns • Shortage of suitable building land in urban areas. • Challenge of multiple ownership • Areas of flat farming land in the New Territories • Influx of 2 million refugees from Mainland China • October 1972, Governor approved major housing programme to provide homes for 1.8 million people by mid-1980’s

  41. Historical Background – New Towns (continued) • More than half of these were planned to be in New Towns • Adoption of long term comprehensive land use-transport-environmental framework • First generation New Towns – Concept of balanced development and self containment

  42. Lessons Learnt – New Towns • Importance of early provision of infrastructure, schools, etc • Need for public housing / Government office decentralisation to act as catalyst and anchor • Private sector will follow but will not lead

  43. Lessons Learnt – New Towns (continued) • Policy of self containment difficult to achieve in practice • Attraction/pull of bright lights and higher salaries in urban areas • High densities defeated green and other environmental priorities

  44. Johnston Road Shophouses (1)

  45. History of Urban Renewal Authority (URA) • Established May 2001 to set new direction for urban renewal in Hong Kong • Previous LDC constrained by requirement that each scheme should satisfy commercial viability criteria • Mission is to revitalise run down areas through redevelopment, revitalisation and rehabilitation

  46. History of URA – Cont’d • At same time preserve culture and heritage and buildings with historical value • Endowed with compulsory purchase powers and ability to offer cash compensation and/or rehousing arrangements to affected parties • Tasked to implement 225 projects in 20 years, and 43 in first five years

  47. Lessons Learnt – Urban Renewal • Social content renders most schemes commercially non-viable • Need for acceptance that social element is a cost to the community at large • Redevelopment should be a matter of last resort and focus should be on regeneration and revitalisation • Social impact and the people factor are key issues to be addressed and reality is that soft is often more important than hard

  48. Johnston Road Shophouses after preservation

  49. Professional Property Services Limited Thank You!

More Related