Hong Kong saw fresh records of home-buying from mainland Chinese in the first three quarters following efforts by the city to attract foreign professionals and remove purchase curbs, major realtor Centaline Property Agency said.
In the first nine months, 8,133 new and second-hand homes, representing 24 per cent of total sales, were purchased by mainland Chinese buyers, according to a Centaline survey that tracks buyers’ names with Mandarin spellings.
The value of the properties sold to mainland Chinese totalled HK$90.6 billion (S$15.5 billion)
Both the transaction volume and value were record highs, the realtor said on Wednesday (Oct 30), and increased 68 per cent and 43 per cent, respectively, from a year ago.
Hong Kong’s government is trying to prop up the struggling residential property market by lifting all additional stamp duties for foreign and second home buyers in February.
Earlier this month, it also relaxed the down-payment ratio to 30 per cent for all properties, and allowed purchases of luxury homes worth more than HK$50 million to be included in its investment immigration scheme.
The financial hub is still one of the world’s most unaffordable property market even after prices tumbled nearly 30 per cent from their 2021 peak.
The city launched a range of talent attraction measures in 2022, after the former British colony saw an exodus of residents including expatriates following anti-government protests in 2019 and then the pandemic. Most of the population gap has since been filled by mainland Chinese.
Centaline said that most of the mainland Chinese purchases occurred in the secondary market, and the average spending was HK$11 million, the price for small-to-medium sized homes.