Archive for 十一月, 2011

Govt to tighten home sale rules

Proposal to protect buyers from misleading information

The Hong Kong government on Tuesday launched a two-month public consultation on a proposed bill to tighten legislation on the sale of first-hand homes.

The bill, which is planned to be introduced to the Legislative Council in the first quarter of next year, is intended to protect home buyers from misleading information. Developers could face a maximum penalty of a HK$5 million fine and seven years’ imprisonment under the proposed law.

“There are consumer protections on other areas, and there should be similar protections on selling properties” said Secretary for Transport and Housing Eva Cheng. The proposed bill covers the sale of all completed and uncompleted first-hand residential properties in the city.

It sets out detailed and specific requirements on when and how the information about the flats should be publicized, and provides a standard definition for the saleable area (net floor area) of flats which includes any verandah or utility platform while excluding bay windows and public parts.

The sales brochure will be required to provide the saleable area of the property, and will be prevented from containing any promotional material as well as artist’s impressions of the development.

The consultation paper also imposes heavy penalties on developers and agents who intentionally give fraudulent or misleading information to buyers. Fines ranges from HK$100,000 to HK$5 million, plus imprisonment from a minimum of six months up to a maximum of seven years, depending on the severity of the misbehavior.

Cheng said the proposed legislation is aimed at enhancing the transparency of sales arrangements of first-hand residential properties, and strike a balance between protection for consumers and allowing property developers the flexibility to make commercial decisions based on market conditions.

As the present regulatory framework is unable to cover all the first-hand home transactions in the city, Cheng said the government agreed that there is a general consensus on a need to use legislation to regulate sales to improve protection for the buyers.

The adoption of “saleable area” would enable prospective home buyers to better compare flat prices at different new developments calculated on the same basis, according to the government.

However, as home sales in Hong Kong have always been priced based on gross floor area which includes an apportionment of public areas, other than the saleable area set in the proposal, Centaline Property Agency’s director of research Wong Leung-sing told China Daily the regulation will also affect the second-hand market as well once new homes are inevitably resold.

Justin Chiu, executive director of Cheung Kong (Holding) Ltd said the same day that he believes the city’s developers would support the proposal as it would provide more information to potential buyers and improve the transparency of first-hand home transactions in the city.

The two-month consultation period will last until Jan 28, 2012.

Hong Kong has witnessed a sharp rise in the number of new launches in recent weeks, but home prices in the city have dropped over the past two months, falling by around 2.7 percent from their peaks recorded in earlier 2011 to the lowest in more than six months, according to a report published by Centaline last week.
litao@chinadailyhk.com

China Daily
(HK Edition 11/30/2011 page2)
http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/hkedition/2011-11/30/content_14184644.htm

Operators turn cautious on shipping outlook

Operators and analysts have turned more cautious on the outlook for the container shipping industry as the deteriorating European debt crisis and sluggish economic growth in other developed economies weighs on global trade activities.

Hong Kong-based container shipping company Orient Overseas (International) Ltd (OOIL) has cut its capacity on routes to Europe by 20 percent amid lower demand for trade, Chairman and Chief Executive Tung Chee-chen said on Friday.

Tung explained that he remains pessimistic on the shipping industry’s outlook due to the slowdown in the global economy and higher costs.

“Asia-Pacific is good and growing. The problem is Asia to America and Europe,” Tung told reporters on the sidelines of a logistics and marine services conference.

In August, the operator of Hong Kong’s biggest container line, which ships finished and semi-finished goods ranging from toys to garments to the West from Asia, reported an 86 percent slump in its first-half profit.
OOIL said it expected “difficult” conditions next year as shipping rates continue to decline due to the sluggish global trade activities.

The global container shipping industry had lost money in the third quarter, Tung noted. In October, OOIL reported that third-quarter revenue fell 8 percent from a year earlier, partly because of falling freight rates due to softening demand for international trade.

Tung said the company hasn’t decided whether to cut its capacity for next year and will continue to review trading conditions.

A SWS Research report said on Tuesday that some Chinese shipping companies plan to withdraw capacity from late November as both the freight rate and load factors are declining.

Shipping tariffs have declined 5.8 percent and 4.7 percent in the Asia-Europe (AE) and Mediterranean routes due to weakening demand. The load factor has declined from 80 percent to 75 percent both in AE and Mediterranean with the fade out of Christmas shipment, the report noted.

“We are quite pessimistic about the European economy and Chinese export to Europe in coming several months,” Zhang Yang, an analyst from SWS wrote. “The declining trend will continue unless the shipping companies cooperate and idle the ships again.”

On Friday, Maersk Line, the unprofitable container shipping unit of A.P. Moeller-Maersk A/S, said it will combine some of its routes on the trade from Asia to Europe as freight rates are declining.

MISC Bhd, Southeast Asia’s largest shipping line by market value, announced on Thursday that it will exit container shipping to focus on its core tanker operations, after the unit lost $789 million in three years.
Eunkyung Park, an analyst with Samsung Securities, said MISC’s withdrawal is consistent with the view that unprofitable tonnage will exit the industry over the next two quarters – either as a consequence of prudent management or through economic imperative.

“A combination of reduced capacity and unilateral efforts on the parts of shipping companies is expected to allow freight rates to reset at higher levels and for share prices to reflect an improved earnings environment,” Park wrote in the report published Friday.

litao@chinadailyhk.com
China Daily
(HK Edition 11/26/2011 page2)
http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/hkedition/2011-11/26/content_14165687.htm

City exports pick up 11.5% in Oct

Figures come as a bit of surprise to local economists

Hong Kong’s total exports rose 11.5 percent in October year-on-year, a strong rebound from the 3.0 percent decline in September, suggesting that the export sector is not doing as poorly as many have feared.

The city’s total exports registered double-digit growth again in October, to HK$305.7 billion from a year earlier, helped by a revival in demand from some key markets, particularly the mainland, the Census and Statistics Department reported on Thursday.

It came after a year-on-year decrease of 3.0 percent in exports the previous month – the first fall in nearly two years due to the slowdown in the developed economies.

Before the government’s release, seven economists in a Bloomberg survey forecast that Hong Kong exports would only gain 1 percent in October.

Total imports in October increased 10.9 percent to HK$328.8 billion year-on-year, leaving a trade deficit of more than HK$23.1 billion, the government data shows. It also outstripped a prediction of 3.1 percent growth of imports in the Bloomberg survey.

The rebound in exports was nearly across-the-board, with a distinct turnaround seen in exports to the mainland, a government spokesman said in the release, commenting on why exports resumed positive year-on-year growth last month in the city.

Shipments to the mainland, which account for more than half of external demand for Hong Kong goods, increased by 11.9 percent in October from a year earlier, compared with a 7.3 percent drop registered in September.

Exports to other Asian economies also grew vibrantly, 13.7 percent as a whole compared with the 2.9 percent decrease in September, with those to India up 30.8 percent and those to South Korea rising 20.6 percent in October from the corresponding month last year.

Trade with the US, EU and Japan also reverted to modest growth last month, with exports to the US up 2.0 percent and those to Germany rising 5.5 percent last month, compared with a 8.9 percent and 0.7 percent slide in September.

The spokesman noted that October’s positive reading should also be viewed in conjunction with the relatively low base of comparison a year earlier.

Looking ahead, he further commented that the external environment will continue to be clouded by the rapidly evolving euro-zone sovereign debt crisis and the fragile fundamentals of the advanced economies, and that Hong Kong’s near-term export prospects remain highly uncertain.

The outlook for Hong Kong’s economy in 2012 has been clouded by many uncertainties. As the economies in the US and Europe are expected to remain weak next year, it is hard to feel optimistic about the city’s exports and overall economic performance in the coming year, Financial Secretary John Tsang told legislators this week.

Hong Kong’s economy narrowly missed a technical recession in the third quarter, inching up 0.1 percent during the period. But the figures still pointed to an overall slowdown due to external volatility, and the export sector, in particular, is expected to remain gloomy for the rest of 2011 and will extend into the beginning of 2012, government economist Helen Chan said this month.

Donna Kwok, economist for Greater China from HSBC, shared a similar view. Although a rebound in mainland appetite for Hong Kong exports provided critical support for Thursday’s big upside surprise, Kwok believes the city is seeing further headwinds with the euro zone now moving into recession and US demand still tepid.

“For Hong Kong, although it escaped recession last quarter, another dip into recession remains on the table next year,” said Kwok.

“But provided the US avoids dipping back into recession, the mainland stays on course for a soft landing, and the European debt crisis does not spillover globally, Hong Kong should strike a better balance between growth and inflation,” she added.

litao@chinadailyhk.com
China Daily
(HK Edition 11/25/2011 page2)
http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/hkedition/2011-11/25/content_14159419.htm

Wenzhou investors mass exit?

Despite a burgeoning debt crisis, the Hong Kong property market remains attractive to Wenzhou people because of stable returns and favorable policies. Li Tao reports.

Wenzhou merchants are tipped to have invested a lot in the Hong Kong property market, contributing to the city’s real estate boom over the past two years. However, the burgeoning lending crisis in the wealthy southeastern Chinese city has caused worries here over whether Wenzhou investors will flee, dumping their properties in Hong Kong in a fire sale due to a shortage of funds and therefore bringing an adverse impact on Hong Kong’s home market.

Wenzhou’s robust private sector has allowed it to make a name as one of China’s wealthiest cities. Wenzhou merchants are also known for their speculative investment activities in various sectors in recent years across China and even overseas. After the central government tightened policies for home purchases on the mainland since mid-2010, property investors – particularly those from Wenzhou – flocked to Hong Kong and overseas to buy homes as they were no longer able to raise mortgage loans, or were even forbidden to purchase multiple homes in major mainland cities.

Mainland buyers accounted for 51 percent of Hong Kong’s new home sales by value in the third quarter, up from 37 percent in the previous three months, Centaline Property Agency Ltd said on October 25, adding that mainland buyers constitute 49.7 percent of all transactions in Hong Kong for the launch of new residential projects priced HK$12 million and above during the past three months. And for units priced below that amount, they are still snapping up a sizable 36.2 percent of them.

Zhou Dewen, president of the Wenzhou Small and Medium Enterprises Development Association, estimates that more than 20 percent of Wenzhou’s total overseas investment flowed into Hong Kong, particularly in the city’s real estate market.

“Government measures on homes on the mainland have driven money from Wenzhou to seek profits overseas. Hong Kong is particularly favorable to Wenzhou people as they find it convenient to live there without much language obstacles,” Zhou told China Daily.

However, the cash-rich city has been hit by a severe debt crisis recently. Due to the central government’s tightened credit policies, underground borrowing has become rampant across the country. Total private lending on the mainland is in excess of 2 trillion yuan ($315 billion), according to Ma Jun, Deutsche Bank’s chief economist for Greater China.

In Wenzhou alone, the size of private lending may have reached 110 billion yuan, where almost 90 percent of local families are all involved in it one way or another, a report released by the Wenzhou branch of the People’s Bank of China said at the end of July.

Due to exorbitantly high interest rates and worsening export scenarios, many small enterprises are on the brink of bankruptcy, which has led to worsening debt default problems. At least 80 business people were reported to have disappeared, committed suicide or declared bankruptcy – invalidating debts owed to individual creditors pooled from the informal lending market, China Daily reported recently.

The debt crisis has led to speculation that Wenzhou investors may dump their properties in Hong Kong to get the much-needed cash. Citing agency data, Hong Kong’s local media reported recently that one Wenzhou buyer sold off 11 properties he owned in Hong Kong during the week-long National Day holiday.

The enthusiasm of mainland investors, including those from Wenzhou, in the Hong Kong property market seems to have cooled down as well. During the seven-day “golden” holidays in early October, Hong Kong saw a big drop in property-hunting tourists from the mainland accompanied by a dramatic increase in advertisements on the windows of real estate agencies by those from the mainland wanting to sell up.

“In some new property launches in West Kowloon, the proportion of mainland buyers has decreased to below 30 percent recently from 70 percent a few months ago,” said Du Jinsong, head of China Property Research at Credit Suisse (Hong Kong) Limited. It’s still too early to say mainland investors are fleeing Hong Kong, Du said, but some of them are preparing to weather the bitter storm.

Some business insiders have ruled out the mass exit of mainland investors, especially Wenzhou merchants, from the Hong Kong property market. Wong Leung-sing, associate director of research at Centaline Property Agency Limited, said the media have been exaggerating reports of property investors in Hong Kong selling up. “If there were so many mainland investors that were selling their properties, the prices in the city would have seen notable declines.”

“Mainland property investors in Hong Kong, especially those from Wenzhou, are very wealthy and their reach has extended all over the world,” Wong said. “They have become less active in purchasing new homes in Hong Kong because they expect that prices have peaked, rather than their being short of money.”

Zhou, president of the Wenzhou’s SME development association, holds a similar view. “Even if some Wenzhou businessmen need to sell homes to withdraw funds, they would hardly start from Hong Kong. They would sell their mainland properties, which have been facing price declines and more severe curbs,” said Zhou.

The central government’s crackdown on the underground money market has caused mainland investors to lose an important investment vehicle. As a result, total bank deposits in Wenzhou have soared to 760 billion yuan in the city this year, according to Zhou. This large sum of cash still floating about could flood back to Hong Kong’s property market, he said.

Some deep-pocketed Wenzhou investors also seem to agree, continuing to favor the city as they hold that Hong Kong is one of the global housing markets most worth investing in due to its low mortgage rates, high lease returns as well as friendly government policies.

Gao Lei, a 40-year-old veteran property investor from Wenzhou who owns two properties in Hong Kong, is among these optimists.

In early 2010, he spent HK$18 million on a 1,000-square-foot apartment for a luxury complex built by Sun Hung Kai Properties – the Cullinan. Two months later, he came to Hong Kong with some friends again and bought another similar-sized apartment in the same developer’s Aria-Kowloon Peak, costing another HK$10 million. Both real estate projects were new launches in the market.

The practice of buying to lease is commonly seen among mainland property investors in Hong Kong. Without even spending a single night in the apartments, Gao found a broker and leased them right away.

From the first-half of 2010, Hong Kong has resorted to multiple measures to curb home purchases by non-resident buyers, including higher down payment requirements and heavy stamp duty if one resells the property within a short period of time. In October 2010, it also suspended offering residency rights to mainland investors who buy property in the city in a bid to cool an overheating property market as Hong Kong’s home prices surpassed the previous peak set in 1997.

But these restrictive measures have failed to dampen the investment plan of some mainland investors like Gao, who now holds a Canadian passport – quite a number of his fellows in Wenzhou have obtained Hong Kong or foreign residency, which makes their travels around the globe much easier.

“At least Hong Kong is one of the only major cities in China that has not imposed severe regulatory measures to prevent investors from entering the property market,” Wong said.

According to Gao, after home prices reached a certain level and home transactions were severely restrained by a number of government policies, a number of so-called “speculators” have shifted to a longer-term strategy of generating stable returns from rental incomes.

“To us Wenzhou people, the property market is the most reliable investment area,” Gao told China Daily. “Unless Hong Kong banks stop loaning money to us, I will continue to favor Hong Kong and come to purchase homes,” Gao said.

litao@chinadailyhk.com
(HK Edition 11/11/2011 page2)
http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/hkedition/2011-11/11/content_14076017.htm

Link REIT income up 21% in fiscal H1

The Link Real Estate Investment Trust, the largest local-listed property trust by market capitalization, said on Wednesday its distributable income for the first half of its fiscal year rose 21 percent.

Distributable income in the six months ended September 30 rose to HK$1.42 billion from HK$1.17 billion a year earlier because of rising rental income, the company said in a filing to the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. The company also said it would seek more acquisitions in the city’s retail market.

Revenue rose 10.1 percent to HK$2.89 billion from HK$2.62 billion. Link REIT declared a first-half distribution per unit of HK$0.6311, up from HK$0.5286 last year.

The city’s buoyant local retail market enabled the property operator to charge higher rents this year, according to the statement.

Average monthly rent reached HK$34.2 per square foot in the stated period, up 4.3 percent from HK$32.8 for the same period in 2010. Occupancy and retention rates both saw improvement to stand at 92.1 percent and 79.3 percent respectively in the first six months.

Although economic uncertainty has lashed market sentiment, George Hongchoy, chief executive officer of The Link Management Ltd – manager of the Link REIT – said that “as a majority of the Link REIT’s tenants are providing daily necessity services including supermarkets and restaurants, the nature of these businesses will prove to be defensive amid market fluctuations.”

There is also further room to improve the existing portfolio and Link REIT will continue to look for good purchasing opportunities in a bid to achieve higher rental returns, Hongchoy told at a media briefing on Wednesday.

The Link REIT, whose portfolio comprises shopping malls and parking facilities in the city, bought the commercial portion of Nan Fung Plaza from the Nan Fung group for HK$1,170 million in June of this year – its first acquisition in the private property market since its initial public offering in 2005.

Alvin Chung, associate director of Prudential Brokerage, said more acquisition will follow suit after the Nan Fung Plaza purchase, which has already brought in valuation gains to the group in just a few months.

“The Link REIT has over HK$4 billion cash in hand. Further purchases are inevitable, particularly when the leasing business is still posting tempting returns,” said Chung.

litao@chinadailyhk.com
China Daily
(HK Edition 11/10/2011 page2)
http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/hkedition/2011-11/10/content_14068135.htm

Private sector activity continues to shrink in Oct

Operating conditions in Hong Kong’s private sector economy deteriorated again in October albeit at a slower pace compared with previous months, according to a HSBC survey of purchasing managers.

The HSBC Hong Kong Purchasing Managers Index climbed to 49.0 in October from 45.9 in September, the report released on Thursday shows.

A reading above 50.0 indicates expansion, while below signals contraction. The October data was the third consecutive monthly contraction.

Although October PMI stayed below the 50-neutral mark, the close to neutral level “signaled that the deterioration in the overall operating conditions for Hong Kong’s business was marginal,” Donna Kwok, Greater China economist at HSBC commented, adding that the October reading was underpinned by modest contractions in business activity, new orders and employment.

Private sector companies operating in the city continued to reduce their backlogs of work last month, as domestic and foreign demand remained subdued. The sub-index rose to 49.4 in October from 45.5 a month earlier.

New orders – another sub-index that tracks overall new business the city received – increased to 49.3 in October from the previous 44.5. It was driven in part by new mainland business, which stepped up to 51.1 from 50.5 the month before, after it slowed during the previous two months, according to the report.

“Activity is still cooling in response to weakening Western demand, but with the mainland’s manufacturing sectors back in expansion mode, mainland demand should start to provide a thicker buffer against global economic uncertainty going forward,” said Kwok.

The employment reading strengthened to 49.1 in October from 47.5 in September. It is in line with the overall worsening in operating conditions, and a number of panelists also reported voluntary staff resignations last month, according to the report.

In a study released this week, Hang Seng Bank said it believes more signs of moderation will emerge and estimated growth below 5 percent for the third quarter and less than 4 percent for the fourth quarter.

“While Hong Kong may well fall into a technical recession, what really matters is whether the economy is heading for a significant decline in economic activity for a prolonged period,” Hang Seng Bank economists Ryan Lam and Joanne Yim wrote in the report.

Although rising downside risks are increasing, the bank said it does not envisage a full-fledged recession unless the situation in the major advanced economies deteriorates substantially, adding that it still expects GDP growth to average 5.2 percent for full-year 2011.

On Tuesday, Deloitte said it will maintains its forecast of 6 percent GDP growth in Hong Kong this year.
The global accounting firm nevertheless estimates the government will earn HK$10 billion less in stamp duty and HK$5 billion less in revenue for the last six months of this fiscal year, compared with the period of October 2010 to end-March 2011, citing deterioration of the economic environment in the city.

Financial Secretary John Tsang said last month that he also expected the city’s economic growth to ease to around 4 percent in the third quarter from a year ago due to waning exports and uncertainties in the global economy.

Tsang also expects the city’s GDP growth to reach 5 percent this year, at the lower end of the official forecast of 5 to 6 percent.

litao@chinadailyhk.com
China Daily
(HK Edition 11/04/2011 page2)
http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/hkedition/2011-11/04/content_14034202.htm

Home sales continue their slide

Oct sees city’s house transactions fall for 10th month in a row

Hong Kong’s home sales fell for a 10th consecutive month in October, dropping more than half in both value and volume terms compared with a year ago.

The number of home sales in the city was recorded at 4,643 last month, representing a 3.7 percent decline compared with September and 51.4 percent drop from October 2010, the Land Registry said on its website on Tuesday.

The value of transactions in October also slumped 50 percent to HK$22.5 billion from the same period last year. The sales are also 2.2 percent less than September, according to government figures.

Wong Leung-sing, associate director of research at Centaline Property Agency Limited, noted in a report that both transaction value and volume in October were the lowest on record since February 2009 when 5,043 home transactions were registered with a total sales value of HK$15.8 billion.

In September, a number of lenders in the city, including HSBC, BOC Hong Kong and Citigroup, raised the Hong Kong interbank offered rate (Hibor) and mortgage rate linked to the prime rate – two popular mortgage calculation methods in the city.

Residential property trading activities have slowed since the end of 2010, following the introduction of the Special Stamp Duty and earlier rounds of macro tightening measures, the Hong Kong Monetary Authority said in its half-yearly report released in late September.

Sale and purchase agreements averaged about 9,200 a month during the first six months of 2011, down almost 20 percent from last year. Speculative activities have also softened, according to the report.

However, Financial Secretary John Tsang on October 27 warned that the risk of a housing bubble hasn’t abated despite the steep fall in the number of home transactions.

Home prices, which were 3 percent lower in August compared with June, are still well above the previous peak levels in 1997, according to Tsang.

Hong Kong’s home prices would drop by 35 percent to 45 percent over the next two years in the “hard landing” scenario of a deflationary economic environment, Barclays Capital Research said in a report released on Tuesday.

Even in a “soft landing” scenario, continued mortgage rate increases and a slowing economy will drive prices 25 percent to 30 percent lower over 2012 and 2013, analysts at Barclays wrote in the report.

Buggle Lau, chief analyst of Midland Realty, expects transactions on second-hand homes to further decline in November in the city as investors are holding back amid current market sentiment.

“First-hand home sales will probably rebound as new launches will take place all together in the next few months,” said Lau.

litao@chinadailyhk.com
China Daily
(HK Edition 11/03/2011 page2)
http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/hkedition/2011-11/03/content_14027038.htm

Tenants and investors both eager to occupy Kowloon East: Colliers

Both tenants and investors are optimistic about the long-term outlook for the office-space market in Kowloon East district, with 44 percent of respondents in a survey expecting rents to catch up with Tsim Sha Tsui (TST) in 10 years.

Current rents in TST are approximately 25 to 35 percent higher than Kowloon East, property consultancy Colliers International said in a report released Monday. Survey respondents estimate office rents in Kowloon East to grow by 5 to 8 percent in the next six months but only 0 to 3 percent in TST, according to the report.

After talking to 100 office tenants and investors or owners who currently occupy or own places in Kowloon East or TST, the property consulting firm also found that 52 percent of respondents indicated that they will consider Kowloon East as one of their relocation options upon the expiry of their leases.

The government’s various initiatives to develop Kowloon East will benefit office rental growth in the area, underpinned by the development of transport facilities, creation of new land as well as the conversion of existing industrial buildings, said Simon Lo, executive director of research and advisory for Asia at Colliers.

“While Central’s Grade-A office rents in September 2011 remained 4 percent below the peak of July 2008, Kowloon East on the contrary registered a record high at HK$30 per square foot per month last month, 12 percent more than its pre-financial crisis level,” said Lo.

Chief Executive Donald Tsang announced in October’s policy address that the total Grade A office floor space in Kowloon East’s Kwun Tong and Kowloon Bay had grown 2.5 times to 1.4 million square meters and the government intended to develop the area into a core business area.

Secretary for Development Carrie Lam held a press conference October 13 detailing the ambitious plans to turn Kowloon East – including the site of the former Kai Tak Airport – into another core business district (CBD), and transforming 4 million square meters of land into commercial offices.

A monorail with a price tag of HK$12 billion is also scheduled to link up the area to public transport, according to the government.

litao@chinadailyhk.com
China Daily
(HK Edition 11/01/2011 page2)
http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/hkedition/2011-11/01/content_14011696.htm