HONG KONG (Reuters) – Hong Kong private home prices dropped for the fourth consecutive month in January to the lowest since February 2021, official data showed on Thursday, as the financial city was hit by a new wave of COVID-19 outbreak.
The prices eased 1.1% last month, according to the data, compares to a revised fall of 0.1% in December. The January monthly drop was also the biggest in eleven month.
Hong Kong’s property market is among the world’s most expensive and has stayed largely resilient during the mass protests in 2019 and the pandemic over the past two years, supported by robust demand and lower interest rates.
Its home prices reached a record high in September before consolidating.
Some property agents lowered their full-year price forecast this month as coronavirus infections surged in the Chinese-ruled city and the government rolled out some of the most stringent social restrictions in the world, affecting many businesses.
Hong Kong Property Services expected prices to fall within 5% in the first quarter, but rise 3-5% for the full year on a rebound after the pandemic stabilizes.
“In the last four waves of outbreak, prices all recovered afterward,” Dave Ma, Hong Kong Property Services chief operations officer, said. “Compared to the first outbreak, sellers are not slashing prices as much now and the transaction volumes are higher because people are looking for bargains.”
He said some sellers offloaded property below market price because their business was seriously affected by the pandemic.
Property developers are delaying their new launches, resulting in a plunge in new home transactions. For the secondary market, realtor Centaline expected deal number in February to drop 18% from January to a 24-month low.
Seen as a boost to the property market, the government announced a relaxed rule to allow first-time buyers to borrow 80% mortgage for homes transacted HK$12 million ($1.54 million) and below, compared to HK$10 million previously, while 90% for HK$10 million and below, compared to HK$8 million previously.
For transactions more expensive than HK$12 million, which is the mid- and large-sized home market, buyers can only borrow up to 50%.
($1 = 7.8087 Hong Kong dollars)
(Reporting by Clare Jim; Editing by Jane Wardell)