ADVERTISEMENT

Hong Kong Property Seen Among Riskiest at Savills Investment

Hong Kong’s high prices and low affordability rank it as a risky property market for Savills.

Hong Kong Property Seen Among Riskiest at Savills Investment
The Sham Chun river marking the border between residential and commercial buildings in mainland China, right, and farmland in Hong Kong. (Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Hong Kong’s sky-high prices and low affordability rank it as one of the riskiest property markets for Savills Investment Management, which is avoiding the city in favor of Japan and Australia.

“Hong Kong is highly, highly expensive,” Kiran Patel, who helps manage $18 billion as chief investment officer at Savills Investment, said in an interview in Singapore. “Even with the lowest cost of capital, it is hard to justify today. We don’t think you can keep going up one year after another.”

Hong Kong’s home prices keep soaring higher, climbing 11 percent since the start of 2017 to continue a nine-year bull run. Commercial property prices in the city have also set a slew of records this year. Li Ka-Shing’s CK Asset Holdings Ltd. sold its 75 percent holding in The Center for HK$40.2 billion ($5.15 billion), a record for a Hong Kong office tower, according to reports earlier this month, while a carpark in the Central district slated for redevelopment fetched HK$23.3 billion earlier this year.

Hong Kong was ranked the least affordable city to buy a home, according to the UBS Global Real Estate Bubble Index. Real incomes have virtually stagnated in Hong Kong for many years, so housing is less affordable than in any other city surveyed and the average living space per person amounts to only 14 square meters (150 square feet), the UBS report said.

Savills last year sold out of a residential development joint venture in Hong Kong after cost overruns and planning delays, Patel said. The investment yielded an internal rate-of-return of just 7 percent, instead of the expected 20 percent, he said.

Hong Kong Property Seen Among Riskiest at Savills Investment

While Singapore is more attractive than Hong Kong, both markets have tight supply and are very volatile, Patel said. Still, he is scouting for offices in Singapore as leasing is picking up and the market seems to be bottoming out. Savills sold a couple of Singapore office assets last year as the fund investing in them was maturing, he said.

Japan remains Savills’ most attractive market, given tight property supply and cash flowing into the system, Patel said. Savills also likes Australian property as the economy remains robust and offers stable annuity income.

“We would like to grow in Asia, but there is an abundance of capital and a shortage of assets,” Patel said. “We don’t want to shoot the lights out, we aren’t in the high end opportunistic-risk space. We are looking more for annuity type income so we focus on developed markets like Japan and Australia and some emerging markets like China.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Pooja Thakur in Singapore at pthakur@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Sree Vidya Bhaktavatsalam at sbhaktavatsa@bloomberg.net, Peter Vercoe, Paul Panckhurst

©2017 Bloomberg L.P.