Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Hong Kong’s latest investment craze — parking spots


VINCENT YU/APA man walks past a parking spot outside a residential building in Hong Kong Tuesday, Nov. 27, 2012. Investors looking for new areas to park their cash in Hong Kong are driving up prices for parking spaces, sparking fears of a bubble in the Asian financial center. (AP Photo/Vincent Yu)

Kelvin Chan 
The Associated Press 

HONG KONG—Investors looking for new places to park their cash in Hong Kong are driving up prices for parking spaces, sparking fears of a bubble in the Asian financial centre.
Prices for parking spots in Hong Kong are nearing historic highs, the side effect of government curbs to cool the housing market amid worries of overheating following the latest round of monetary stimulus in the U.S. two months ago.
There are “a lot of speculators in the market, especially for car parks,” said Buggle Lau, senior analyst with Midland Realty. A bubble is “definitely forming.”
Over the weekend, a developer sold about 500 parking spots at a new suburban apartment complex at prices up to 1.3 million Hong Kong dollars ($167,000 U.S.) per space.
In a commercial building near the city’s financial district on Hong Kong Island, an investor has put 34 parking spaces on sale for HK$100 million ($12.9 million U.S.), according to a report last week in the Ming Pao newspaper. A parking spot in the exclusive Repulse Bay neighbourhood sold for HK$3 million, the paper also said, citing Land Registry data.
On Thursday, a single parking spot in a building in the popular Mid-Levels residential neighbourhood will be auctioned off with the opening bid at HK$680,000.
Second-hand parking spaces changed hands in the third quarter for an average of HK$640,000 ($82,000 U.S.). That’s up 16.4 per cent over the year before, according to research by property company Centaline. It’s also not far off the record HK$660,000 in the fourth quarter of 1997, shortly before the city’s property market collapsed.
The rising prices are a side-effect of recent measures to cool Hong Kong’s housing prices, which have doubled since the end of 2009 and are among the highest in the world.
Hong Kong’s government has introduced three separate sets of curbs on property purchases since the summer in a bid to cool the market. U.S. policymakers’ continuing efforts to stimulate the economy by keeping interest rates at an ultralow level and buying tens of billions in bonds each month has raised concerns in Hong Kong about money flooding into the southern Chinese city, pushing asset prices higher as investors chase profits in the property market.
The latest curbs don’t cover nonresidential properties such as parking spots so investors have been piling in as they look for higher returns. Hong Kong had the world’s third-highest monthly parking charges last year, according to real estate company Colliers International.
“In some car parks, especially in urban areas where supply is limited, the sales price of some car parks can be as high as two to three million (Hong Kong) dollars” each, said Lau of Midland Realty.
Nearly 8,400 parking spaces worth HK$5.6 billion changed hands in the first 10 months of this year, compared to 8,300 such transactions worth HK$5.4 billion for all of 2011, according to Land Registry data compiled by Midland.
Some of that increase comes from developers like Cheung Kong Holdings, Sun Hung Kai Properties and Chinachem Group selling off parking spaces at their apartment complexes. It’s a break from the usual practice of renting them out to residents, and is a sign that the developers realize it’s a “pretty good time” to sell because of the prices they can get, Lau said.
Because Hong Kong’s currency is pegged to the U.S. dollar, policymakers cannot take conventional measures to cool property prices like raising interest rates.
So the government tightened restrictions on property purchases, including bringing in a new stamp duty on foreign buyers. But parking spots and other non-residential property are exempt.
“The latest overseas buyers’ stamp duty will just put some fuel onto that fire, and is making the whole parking space investment market go out of control,” said Josh Wong, whose Hong Kong City Parking owns about 200 parking spots at eight lots around Hong Kong.
Many investors who buy spaces rent them out to car owners. Wong said he typically looks for an annual yield, or return, of 5 to 6 per cent, but because prices have risen, yields have been falling to about 4 to 5 per cent. He said has even heard of investors making as little as 1.8 per cent on their investment.
Wong, who also runs Parkinghk.com, a website for buyers and sellers of parking spots, said the market was heating up because investors didn’t need a lot of money to get started.
“One million Hong Kong dollars ($129,000 U.S.) cannot buy anything in Hong Kong. You cannot buy a shop, you cannot buy anything except car parking and that would help the car park investment go even more crazy,” he said.

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