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Chinese companies such as HNA, which spent HK$27.2 billion on acquiring four plots at Hong Kong’s former airport site in Kai Tak, have slowed down their land purchases this financial year. Photo: Bruce Yan

After two years of rapid expansion, Chinese developers back off from Hong Kong projects

A report from S&P Global Ratings shows that Chinese real estate companies bought only 11 per cent of land in tenders in Hong Kong in the current financial year, down from nearly 50 per cent in the previous two years

Concerns about Hong Kong developers losing market share to their Chinese peers are fading as mainland companies have pulled back from their breakneck expansion in the city, according to a report from S&P Global Ratings.

“Mainland developers took up nearly half of the land tenders during the financial years of 2015 and 2016, but their share has dropped to only 11 per cent in the current financial year,” because of the effects of Chinese capital controls and tighter scrutiny on overseas investments, said Esther Liu, who led the research on the latest report released by the ratings agency on Monday.

Liu also highlighted that the longer project cycle length in Hong Kong had increased capital costs and added pressure to the balance sheet of the mainland developers.

“It is typical for major local developers like Sun Hung Kai Properties to take two to three years for developing a new project. But mainland developers such as Country Garden and Vanke were used to developing projects in a shorter time span on the mainland, from land acquisition to presale,[sometimes] as short as six to nine months only,” she said.

Chinese developers also needed more time to gain experience managing pre-project work in Hong Kong such as project orientation and design.

The report also warned that the rise in property prices may not fully offset the land costs for the developers.

Chinese conglomerate HNA Group spent HK$27.2 billion (US$3.5 billion) on four land plots at Hong Kong’s former airport site in Kai Tak over four months since November 2016.

“Chinese developers have kept land costs buoyant in Hong Kong, compressing margins for all. This is likely to kick in when developers start to do projects acquired in the past three years,” she said.

Other analysts were not surprised by the findings.

“Chinese developers had no land bank in Hong Kong so they built their land reserves aggressively a few years ago,” said Thomas Lam, head of valuation and consultancy at Knight Frank. “Now, they have projects in the pipeline together with the capital outflow restriction. I expect that they will continue to purchase land in Hong Kong but a selective and strategic approach will be adopted.”

“Government land tender is only one of the options in obtaining land,” Lam said. “Mainland developers may also go for redevelopment projects in urban land or purchase a site or project from other developers.”

Vincent Cheung, deputy managing director for Asia valuation and advisory services at Colliers International said that President Xi Jinping’s statement that homes are meant for living and not speculation may have also influenced mainland developers’ decisions in Hong Kong.

“China’s policy influence on Chinese developers has given local developers breathing space,” he said. “And they have grasped the opportunity to rebuild their land bank.

“The fact that local developers keep pushing the land price up means they expect the housing market to remain positive in the long run,” he said.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Fears fade that HK builders are losing to mainland firms
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