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How Hong Kong's Property Slump Could Clobber the Economy

Land sales were the biggest contributor to government coffers in the fiscal year ended March 2018.

How Hong Kong's Property Slump Could Clobber the Economy
Residential and commercial buildings are seen from Victoria Peak in Hong Kong, China. (Photographer: Billy H.C. Kwok/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Real estate is the main game in Hong Kong, and as the drop in housing prices nears correction territory, concern is mounting about the toll the downturn will exact on the city’s economy.

Home values in the world’s most expensive property market have fallen about 9 percent from their August peak as the China-U.S. trade war and potential rate hikes hurt consumer confidence. While the likes of JPMorgan Chase & Co. say prices will bottom this quarter, Jones Lang LaSalle Inc. says there’s worse to come, forecasting home values will slump a further 15 percent in 2019.

Here’s what’s at stake if the downturn worsens:

In a city where land is in short supply, the government is able to generate a large amount of revenue from selling vacant plots. Land sales were the biggest contributor to government coffers in the fiscal year ended March 2018.

How Hong Kong's Property Slump Could Clobber the Economy

That also makes the administration highly reliant on the fortunes of the property market. This year’s budget, to be released Wednesday, will probably show the surplus will shrink 63 percent in fiscal 2019, largely because of diminished income from land sales, according to Deloitte LLP.

When the SARS outbreak crushed Hong Kong’s property market in 2003-04 -- slashing the revenue contribution from land sales to just 3 percent -- the budget deficit came in at more than HK$40 billion ($5 billion). With land-sales revenue at a two-decade high, it’s unlikely the good times will last.

How Hong Kong's Property Slump Could Clobber the Economy

The property downturn could also weigh on the broader economy by making homeowners and borrowers feel poorer, as the value of their house declines. That could act as a brake on consumer spending, according to Tommy Wu, a senior economist at Oxford Economics.

“When sentiment worsens as prices fall, people will be more cautious on consumption,” Wu said. “And when the value of the pledged property drops, there will also be more pressure on borrowing.”

How Hong Kong's Property Slump Could Clobber the Economy

Developers also play an outsize role in Hong Kong’s stock market, comprising the third-largest sector by weighting, following finance and communications, data compiled by Bloomberg shows.

That makes the share-market’s performance closely linked to the property sector. During the last decline in home prices between 2015-2016, the Hang Seng Index dropped about 10 percent. Then, as the property market boomed, with house values peaking at a record high in mid-2018, the index surged about 40 percent.

How Hong Kong's Property Slump Could Clobber the Economy

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, Peter Vercoe

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