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Hong Kong Property Just Hit an All-Time High

Hong Kong Property Just Hit an All-Time High

(Bloomberg) -- In the world’s most-expensive real estate market, the sky’s the limit.

Property prices in Hong Kong reached an all-time high Friday after relentless gains over the past three months. Home values in the city have now broken their previous record set last August, Centaline data show, making the correction from mid last year through January look like a temporary blip.

The Centa-City Leading Index, which measures the city’s used homes values, stood at 189.42 for the week ended May 26, the highest ever. Prices have risen by 8.6% since the beginning of the year.

Hong Kong Property Just Hit an All-Time High

Home prices have rebounded on revived sentiment around low interest rates and limited supply. UBS Group AG said earlier this month that the property market in Hong Kong will remain bullish for another decade, thanks in part to the population influx from mainland China.

In some quarters, the demand has never let up. At Wheelock Properties Ltd.’s Montara project in the Tseung Kwan O area, 103 potential buyers have been vying for each unit, making it the most competitive project since 2013, the Hong Kong Economic Times reported May 10.

It’s grim news for those trying to get on the property ladder. Hong Kong already holds the mantle of the world’s least-affordable property market and this will make even basic apartments the preserve of the rich. A CBRE Group Inc. report in April found that the city has the highest average home price at $1.2 million, as well as the highest average prime property price at $6.9 million.

Hong Kong Property Just Hit an All-Time High

Still, others have more bearish predictions. Knight Frank said this week that home prices may dip 5% in the second half due to the uncertainties from the trade war and stock market volatility. And noted economist and Harvard professor Carmen Reinhart told a conference in Singapore that the city’s property market is showing signs of a bubble.

To contact the reporter on this story: Shawna Kwan in Hong Kong at wkwan35@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Katrina Nicholas at knicholas2@bloomberg.net, Russell Ward

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