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This is why you shouldn't invest in shoebox apartment. When property prices drop, no one is interested in buying a shoebox

SBFNews

Alfrescian
Loyal

Hong Kong’s tiniest apartments take biggest hit in housing slump​

THU, DEC 22, 2022 - 09:11 AM

T Plus, a three-year-old project with some of the city’s smallest apartments at merely 128 sq ft, had seven out of nine transactions since October sold at a loss, Midland data show.

HONG Kong’s notorious tiny apartments, sometimes no bigger than a parking space, have emerged as the biggest losers in the city’s property downturn.

Buyers are snubbing so-called nano flats as they opt for bigger options following mortgage policy changes and price drops. Developers were only able to sell 48 per cent of the studio apartments available in the first 11 months this year, while the rate for one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments stood at 53 per cent and 67 per cent, respectively, according to Midland Realty.

“More buyers can buy one-bedroom or two-bedroom units now” as a result of relaxed mortgage rules and lower prices, said Sammy Po, chief executive officer of Midland’s home division. “So there are few people who would want to buy nano flats.”

Strained by interest rate hikes and a population exodus, Hong Kong home values have dropped by more than 14 per cent this year, with full-year sales volume expected to plummet to the lowest since 2013.

Hong Kong’s first-time homebuyers can acquire more expensive properties with just 10 per cent down payment. The cap on housing value for such arrangements was lifted to HK$10 million (S$1.7 million) from HK$8 million in February.

Properties in the Asian financial hub have been expensive and out of reach for many, making it the world’s least affordable market. Those with less financial ability have resorted to small studio apartments, subdivided flats or industrial buildings.

 

JohnTan

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset

Hong Kong’s tiniest apartments take biggest hit in housing slump​

THU, DEC 22, 2022 - 09:11 AM

T Plus, a three-year-old project with some of the city’s smallest apartments at merely 128 sq ft, had seven out of nine transactions since October sold at a loss, Midland data show.

HONG Kong’s notorious tiny apartments, sometimes no bigger than a parking space, have emerged as the biggest losers in the city’s property downturn.

Buyers are snubbing so-called nano flats as they opt for bigger options following mortgage policy changes and price drops. Developers were only able to sell 48 per cent of the studio apartments available in the first 11 months this year, while the rate for one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments stood at 53 per cent and 67 per cent, respectively, according to Midland Realty.

“More buyers can buy one-bedroom or two-bedroom units now” as a result of relaxed mortgage rules and lower prices, said Sammy Po, chief executive officer of Midland’s home division. “So there are few people who would want to buy nano flats.”

Strained by interest rate hikes and a population exodus, Hong Kong home values have dropped by more than 14 per cent this year, with full-year sales volume expected to plummet to the lowest since 2013.

Hong Kong’s first-time homebuyers can acquire more expensive properties with just 10 per cent down payment. The cap on housing value for such arrangements was lifted to HK$10 million (S$1.7 million) from HK$8 million in February.

Properties in the Asian financial hub have been expensive and out of reach for many, making it the world’s least affordable market. Those with less financial ability have resorted to small studio apartments, subdivided flats or industrial buildings.


I've seen regular HK condo or apartments. And they too look like shoebox units. Can't imagine how their actual shoebox units are like. Probably no better than the cages those HK serfs rent.
 

JohnTan

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
Good model for your. Papig masters

If you prefer HK style of government, you're welcome to stay in those nano units.

The problem with HK housing property market has to do a lot with the HK government getting the bulk of their government funding from land sales.
 

SBFNews

Alfrescian
Loyal
I've seen regular HK condo or apartments. And they too look like shoebox units. Can't imagine how their actual shoebox units are like. Probably no better than the cages those HK serfs rent.
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