现时经济不景,惟中环区贵重物业仍然受捧,近日录大额铺位成交,高价出乎市场人士意料,区内车位推售亦随即获承接,买家皆为老牌家族成员,可见其实力雄厚。
中环中心车位连录承接
资深投资者「磁带大王」陈秉志减价逾20%推售中环中心车位,市场立即有反应,车位连录成交,其中B2层2个相连车位,以每个468万成交,新买家协成行家族成员;还有,B1层双号车位亦以550万成交,买家为九记牛腩负责人相关人士,九记牛腩为食肆名店,多年来均获米芝莲星级推介,座上客包括名人及明星。
业内人士指,上述买家可能是区内用家,协成行大本营设于中环,九记牛腩亦位于区内歌赋街,事实上,中环区内车位供应罕有,过往旺市时「一位难求」,实力买家把握淡市时入市。
巨铺呎价造价皆高企
中环德辅道中84至86号章记大厦地下及地库以3.7亿易手,呎价高达5万,新买家为恒生银行创办人之一利国伟家族及有关人士,据了解,新买家看中该巨铺中环罕有,面积大,银行、零售及食肆皆适宜。该巨铺地下面积约3163方呎,地库面积约4200方呎,合共7363方呎,平均呎价约5万。利国伟家族亦于2020年4月,以2.86亿买入中环永安集团大厦全层,平均呎价2.58万。
(星岛日报)
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Tesla趁租平 转战荃湾甲厦环贸广场
包括写字楼及铺位 月租共45万元
甲厦空置率高,租客选择多,全新甲厦及超甲厦吸引租户搬迁。消息指,荃湾新甲厦环贸广场写字楼及铺位,获电动车品牌Tesla租用作搬迁。另外,中环国际金融中心一期及国际金融中心二期,相继录欧美金融机构承租作升级。
市场人士透露,荃湾沙咀道1号环贸广场低层3至7室,面积合共约5,740平方呎,以每呎约18元租出,每月租金约10万元,新租客为电动车龙头品牌Tesla,该品牌目前租用九龙湾国际展贸中心地下及楼下办公室,由于大业主将为物业拆卸重建,商户需寻找新办公室,相信Tesla看好荃湾区租金较便宜,而物业属全新,故决定租用。
8地铺料作陈列室 呎租近50元
据了解,是次Tesla除了租用办公室外,亦租用物业地下8个铺位,面积合共约7,045平方呎,月租约35万元,呎租近50元,料作品牌陈列室之用。
环贸广场为甲厦重建项目,由亿京发展,项目去年落成,资料显示,环贸广场录得约10宗买卖成交,平均呎价约1万元,涉及以中、小型单位为主,面积介乎约543至2,125平方呎,售价由535至2,141万元不等,每平方呎造价介乎9,108至10,735元。由于销情仍较慢,发展商把部分单位转作收租,并成功吸引大型汽车品牌租用。
另外,消息指中环国际金融中心二期低层13至15室,面积约4,632平方呎,以约55.6万元租出,呎租约120元。据悉,新租客为英资金融机构,原租用同区万宜大厦4,000呎单位,是次租用国际金融中心二期,面积相若,主要可作物业升级。
爱彼錶租 The Henderson 全层
其次,同区国际金融中心一期38楼全层,面积约16,247平方呎,成交呎租约120元,涉及每月租金约195万元。新租客为美资金融机构,原租用同区盈置大厦两层楼面,如今租用国际金融中心全层,既可整合业务,同时提升办公室质素。
该层楼面原由瑞士老牌私人银行宝盛集团租用,集团原本租用中环国际金融中心一期3层楼面。2021年该集团决定预租鰂鱼涌太古坊二座4层楼面作搬迁,可节省租金支出,本年中,其中一层楼面获中资科企巨头字节跳动租用作扩充,现另一层则获美资金融机构承租,反映超甲厦仍属国际企业首选。
事实上,近期中环超甲厦租务稍加快,如恒地 (00012) 旗下 The Henderson 明年初落成,近日亦获瑞士制錶品牌爱彼錶 (Audemars Piguet) 租用全层约1.2万平方呎楼面,作为其AP House及香港办公室之用,市场估计呎租约120元。
(经济日报)
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New Tuen Mun flats are heavily oversubscribed
Flats on sale at Mori in Tuen Mun received a warm response and were heavily oversubscribed at the weekend despite major lenders' mortgage rate hikes.
The project, which is being jointly developed by Road King Infrastructure (1098) and Shenzhen Investment (0604), was 16 times oversubscribed after attracting more than 2,500 checks for the 140 units in the first batch of sales.
Homes cost from HK$3.13 million to HK$8.24 million after discounts, or HK$9,168 to HK$12,336 per square foot.
The average discounted price of HK$11,088 per sq ft is about 11.4 percent cheaper than the first price list of Grand Jeté's Phase 2 in the same area in March but slightly higher than that of THE CARMEL launched in January 2019.
The second batch and the sales arrangement will be announced soon, the developers said, adding that they had partnered with a mortgage broker to offer a variety of mortgage packages with mortgage rates as low as 3.625 percent and up to 2.8 percent for a cash rebate.
With market attention on the primary market, second-hand home sales remained sluggish with only six deals recorded in the 10 biggest estates over the weekend, an agency said.
That was seven deals or 53.8 percent fewer than the previous weekend.
An agent from the agency said rising mortgage rates and the upcoming Federal Reserve meeting also weighed on sentiment.
China Construction Bank (Asia), a relatively small player in the mortgage market, is to lift the mortgage rate by 1.5 percentage points to 5.125 percent today, meaning a nearly 20-percent rise in the monthly repayment for new loan applicants.
That will be much higher than the 0.5 percentage point hike by major banks like The Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation and Bank of China Hong Kong (2388).
The new rate of 4.125 percent will be applied to new loans for existing homes from today and uncompleted homes from September 30.
(The Standard)
PGIM invests in Hong Kong, mainland China, Australia rental property markets, betting on their strong fundamentals, discounted assets
There is a growing need for rental housing especially in cities where the cost of residential buying has become really high, according to PGIM
The property markets in mainland China, Australia and Hong Kong are in different stages of the real estate cycle, but have high rental growth potential
PGIM Real Estate has invested US$400 million in the housing rental markets in Hong Kong, mainland China and Australia, as the US asset manager sees huge growth in these segments and opportunities to snap up assets at deep discounts amid a challenging business environment.
“The living sector has increasingly become a big thing for us,” said Benett Theseira, managing director and head of Asia-Pacific, at PGIM Real Estate. “Increasingly we see this growing need for rental housing, and especially in cities where the cost of residential buying has become really high. And because of that we see this growing need for residential rental housing in cities like Singapore, Hong Kong, Shanghai, and in Sydney and Melbourne in Australia.”
“Hence the opportunity to invest in that provides a good investment return and also the opportunity to provide a product to this demographic of young professionals … so we can contribute to creating a good quality product and affordable product for them, which is why we went well into the sector,” he added.
In mainland China, PGIM Real Estate has partnered with a domestic rental flat operator to acquire a 19-storey purpose-built flat building in Shanghai. The property comprises over 500 flats and provides common areas and facilities including a gymnasium and a resident’s lounge.
In Australia, PGIM has formed a joint venture with a property developer to develop a portfolio of residential properties for rent in major cities to ease a hugely undersupplied housing market. The partnership aims to have a portfolio of as many as 1,250 flats, according to PGIM.
Two seed assets have been acquired, one in Brisbane and the other in Sydney, and the two neighbourhoods were chosen for their status as employment and entertainment hubs. The assets have about 300 small flats each.
Those acquisitions followed deals in Hong Kong, where PGIM acquired two hotels last year with the aim of converting them into co-living flats this year.
The Rosedale Hotel has been converted to Weave Studios Kowloon West with 435 fully furnished studio flats over 29 floors, while the Travelodge Central has been converted to Dash Living on Hollywood. Located near the Olympic MTR station, the Weave Studios property launched operations in May and is now 80 per cent occupied. Dash Living on Hollywood, which opened in July, is now about 30 per cent occupied, PGIM’s Theseira said.
The three property markets are in different stages in the real estate cycle, but share one crucial element that made them attractive – high rental growth.
In mainland China, for example, the median house prices in major cities were about 30 times the average annual household income. The current uncertainty in the property market in the world’s second-largest economy is also spurring the growth rate in the rental market to high single digits, Theseira said. The turmoil is also spurring asset owners to offer properties at a 20 per cent to 30 per cent discount in some cases.
“Discounts are not uncommon,” Theseira said. “And certainly focusing on the strong demand for rental housing is where we see the opportunity. We are picking the right assets that will benefit from the recovery in value when market conditions improve.”
Meanwhile, Hong Kong remains one of the world’s most unaffordable housing markets and the current high interest rate environment, currently at levels last seen in February 2008, is also making potential homebuyers cautious and they are instead opting to rent.
Australia, with its strong immigration growth, high interest rates and median home prices about 10 times household income is also forecast to see rental market growth of high single digits, Theseira said.
“We found that the structural drivers were very favourable, particularly in China and Australia,” he said.
In the short-term, Theseira said Singapore is another rental market that the group finds attractive and with monetary authorities likely to start easing by the latter part of 2024, the group is also looking to be more active in its investment in the region.
In mainland China, the co-living segment is a “highly viable property segment”, a property agent said.
“Rental housing properties have continued to gain traction at a resilient pace in mainland China over the past few years, underpinned by China’s favourable demographics, stretched housing affordability, as well as people’s growing awareness and acceptance of renting,” the agent said. “In addition to those robust demand fundamentals, China’s rental housing sector has also benefited from the country’s encouraging policy support including dedicated land supply, tax incentives and financial support.”
(South China Morning Post)
Hong Kong home price seen falling by 5 per cent after 7 major lenders including HSBC, Standard Chartered set to increase mortgage rates
The effective mortgage rate for new loans from HSBC, Hang Seng, BOCHK, Standard Chartered and BEA will rise by 50 basis points on Monday
The higher mortgage rates will pressurise home prices to fall by 3 to 5 per cent in the next few months, property agents say
Hong Kong home prices are set to fall by about 5 per cent by the end of this year, analysts say, after seven major lenders, including the three note-issuing banks – HSBC, Standard Chartered Bank, and Bank of China (Hong Kong) – said they will raise their mortgage rates as early as Monday.
The trio, together with Hang Seng Bank and Bank of East Asia from will increase mortgage rates for new loan applications by 50 basis points on Monday, while Citibank will make a similar increase on Wednesday (September 20), the lenders’ spokesmen said in a reply to the Post’s inquiries.
The effective mortgage rate for new loans by these six lenders, which control 80 per cent of the mortgage market, will be increased from 3.625 per cent to 4.125 per cent. Existing home loans will not be affected.
The payment on a typical HK$5 million (US$643,000) mortgage over 30 years will increase by 6 per cent after the mortgage rate increases, or by HK$1,430 per month to HK$24,232, according to calculations made by a mortgage broker.
China Construction Bank (Asia) went even further in increasing its mortgage rates for new loans. It plans a 1.5 percentage point rise starting Monday, from 3.625 per cent to 5.125 per cent, according to the mortgage broker which was citing market sources. The Post’s calls to the lender, which has a 0.3 per cent share in Hong Kong’s mortgage market, went unanswered.
“The mortgage rate rise is going to further hit the already weak property market in Hong Kong. High borrowing costs will discourage people from buying new homes at the moment,” a property agent said.
“The increase in mortgage rates will lead home prices further down by 3 to 5 per cent in the next few months.”
Hong Kong’s lived-in home prices declined for a third straight month in July to a six-month low, as the city’s property market continued to struggle in an elevated interest-rate environment. Prices fell 1.1 per cent month on month in July, the biggest drop this year, according to an index compiled by the Rating and Valuation Department.
The total number of property transactions – including new and second-hand homes, commercial buildings and car parks – dropped for a fourth consecutive month in July, declining 7.6 per cent from June to 4,777, according to a report released by a property agency last month. That is the lowest figure in seven months.
“It is highly likely the home prices will decrease over 3 per cent in the following months, offsetting all gains this year,” an agent said. “The home price this year will be flat this year when compared with a year earlier.”
A prolonged high-interest rate environment, slow income growth in Hong Kong and falling property prices in mainland China are likely to keep affordability pressures beyond this year, Goldman Sachs (Asia) analysts Gurpreet Singh Sahi, Wing Huang and Simon Cheung wrote in a report on Friday.
“The latest raise would pressure affordability further,” the Goldman Sachs analysts said. “Hence, we reverse our call for a price improvement in the residential market this year to a flat outcome versus an increase of 5 per cent outlook before.”
Goldman Sachs also expects home prices to remain flat in the following two years and to increase only in 2026 by 4 per cent.
The plans by major lenders to increase mortgage rates comes ahead of the US Federal Reserve meeting later in the week, where analysts widely expected a pause in its rate rising campaign, given the rosier inflation picture.
The Hong Kong Monetary Authority in July raised the city’s base rate, lifting it for the 11th time in the past 17 months by a total of 5.25 percentage points, in lockstep with the Federal Reserve. Hong Kong’s monetary policy follows that of the United States, as the city’s currency has been pegged to the US dollar since 1983.
Commercial banks raised their prime rate five times since September last year by a total of 0.875 percentage points. BOCHK, HSBC Holdings, and its subsidiary Hang Seng Bank now have their prime rates at 5.875 per cent, while those at Standard Chartered Bank, Bank of East Asia, Citibank, and CCB Asia are at 6.125 per cent. These levels were last seen in December 2007.
“Hong Kong lenders may still increase the prime rate this week as the interbank rate is high,” the mortgage broker said. “The US may also further increase the interest rate in November,” he added, reflecting the market expectations that authorities will keep at least one rate hike on the table.
The one-month Hong Kong interbank offered rate (Hibor), the benchmark for mortgages, rose to 5 per cent on Friday, compared with 4.7 per cent last month and 4.2 per cent at the beginning of this year, according to Hong Kong Association of Banks.
The three-month Hibor, which is linked to corporate loans, stood at 5 per cent on Friday, while the six-month Hibor reached 5.18 per cent, and the 12-month Hibor advanced to 5.4 per cent on Friday. All three benchmarks are 50 basis points higher than three months ago.
“We have decided to revise our mortgage rate following a recent review, which takes into account a range of factors, including Hibor, our competitiveness and market pricing,” a spokesman of HSBC said.
(South China Morning Post)