A record bid for a car park in Hong Kong’s central business district could be an indicator the city’s crazy commercial property price boom is about to end.
Henderson Land Development Co. paid HKD23.3 billion (USD3 billion) for what was the first piece of commercial land to be sold by the government in the city’s Central district since 1996.
Office space in Central ranks among the world’s priciest, ahead of London’s West End and midtown Manhattan. Vacancy rates were just 1.5 percent in the first quarter, according to a March survey by CBRE Group Inc.
The price Henderson paid signals the top of a market. Having effectively forked out HKD50,000 a square foot, Henderson would need to sell at a price of at least HKD60,000 to recover construction and development costs. The most expensive office spaces in Hong Kong are currently going for around HKD39,700 (at 9 Queen’s Road, Central). The developer’s shares fell as much as 2.9 percent in trading Wednesday.
Also striking was the relative absence of mainland developers, long a driving force in the city’s residential market. C C Land Holdings Ltd. and Shimao Property Holdings Ltd., as part of a consortium led by local firm Sino Land Co., were the only two Chinese companies in the bidding. For the absence of mainland developers, Hong Kong firms have the central bank to thank.
The Hong Kong Monetary Authority tightened limits on bank loans to property developers earlier this month, saying that from June 1, developers can only borrow up to 40 percent of a site’s value, down from half currently. It also cut the cap on loans for construction costs, to 80 percent from 100 percent, while the overall limit on bank financing for an entire project was reduced to 50 percent of the expected value of the property, from 60 percent.
That’s significant because it’s typically the Chinese developers needing loans rather than the local ones. According to Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Patrick Wong, the average net debt-to-equity ratio of six major Hong Kong developers was 22 percent at the end of 2016, versus 110 percent for 20 firms from the mainland. Beijing has also imposed various capital controls that make it harder to get money out.
Hong Kong developers’ new-found breathing space may be short-lived, however. Options outside of Hong Kong’s Central district are expanding and rather than pay CBD rents, some companies are looking further afield at places like Quarry Bay in Hong Kong island’s east. And while Central is full to bursting, the supply of commercial real estate overall in Hong Kong is rising: Citigroup Inc. forecasts that office completions should reach 3 million square feet this year with another 2.5 million square feet coming online next year, exceeding demand.
Hong Kong’s home buyers may have to wait a while before residential prices start to fall. But it looks as if commercial real estate has already hit the down button. Nisha Gopalan, Bloomberg
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