Hong Kong’s housing market has survived political change and the COVID pandemic to remain the world’s most expensive. But there’s one thing it can’t escape: rising interest rates.
Home prices in Hong Kong, long the world’s most expensive housing market, could fall by 30% by the end of 2023, compared with 2021’s prices, analysts at Goldman Sachs predicted in a note on Tuesday. Home prices have already fallen by 8% so far this year, the investment bank said.
Other players in the city’s property sector are warning of a decline. Centaline Property Agency, one of the largest property agencies in the city, warned on Tuesday that 2022 property sales could hit a 27-year low.
Hong Kong is currently struggling through an economic slump. The city is already in a technical recession, and the city’s government projects economic growth between –0.5% and 0.5% for the year.
Goldman Sachs blames the rapid decline on a faster-than-expected rise in the Hong Kong interbank offered rate (HIBOR), to which 90% of the city’s mortgages are tied.
Hong Kong is hiking interest rates to match the U.S. Federal Reserve. The Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA), the city’s de facto central bank, raised its baseline interest rate to 3.5% on Sept. 22, the morning after the U.S. Federal Reserve also hiked interest rates.
The HIBOR, which is set by banks, is also increasing, with the three-month HIBOR rate at a 14-year high of 3.46%.
Hong Kong is forced to raise interest rates to match the Fed to protect the Hong Kong dollar’s currency peg to the U.S. dollar. The Hong Kong dollar trades between 7.75 and 7.85 to the U.S. dollar.
But if Hong Kong has lower interest rates than the U.S., traders could borrow money in Hong Kong dollars, convert it to U.S. dollars, and invest in the U.S. to take advantage of its higher interest rates. Left unchecked, traders selling the local currency would weaken the Hong Kong dollar, threatening the peg and forcing the HKMA to intervene.
The city kept its status as the world's most expensive housing market even through 2019’s social unrest and the COVID pandemic. In 2021, the median home price in Hong Kong was a whopping 23.2 times the median income, according to the Urban Reform Institute and the Frontier Centre for Public Policy think tanks. The city has had the world’s least affordable housing 12 years in a row.
That’s far ahead of the second-most expensive housing market, Sydney, with a 15.3 ratio between median home prices and income.
The least affordable market in the U.S., according to the think tank’s report, is San Jose, with a 12.6 ratio between median home prices and income, making it the fourth least affordable housing market overall.
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
(Bloomberg) — Sign up for the New Economy Daily newsletter, follow us @economics and subscribe to our podcast.The world’s leading central banks are finally pushing their interest rates into restrictive territory, causing fears of overkill in financial markets and stoking chatter that policymakers may need to pivot at some point.The Federal Reserve, European Central Bank and most of their peers are set to keep raising borrowing costs aggressively in coming weeks. The faster they go, the more que
(Bloomberg) — Sign up for the New Economy Daily newsletter, follow us @economics and subscribe to our podcast.Global finance chiefs gather in Washington in the coming days with the warning of a possible $4 trillion loss in the world’s economic output ringing in their ears.That’s the Germany-sized hole in the growth outlook through 2026 that International Monetary Fund chief Kristalina Georgieva identified last week as a looming risk. She’ll play host as central bankers, finance ministers and ot
Over half of retirees never move, according to the Center for Retirement Research. Instead, they remain in the same home they lived in during their early 50s, also known as aging in place. If you're…
Queen or Queen Consort? Camilla has complicated history with royal titles.
The right answer likely hinges on whether or not the Federal Reserve follows through with plans to raise its benchmark interest rate to 4.5% or higher, as market-based indicators and the Fed’s latest batch of projections anticipate. Global markets are on edge about the possibility of an emerging-markets crisis resulting from higher interest rates and a U.S. dollar at a 20 year high, or a slump in the housing market due to rising mortgage rates, or the collapse of a financial institution due to the worst bond market chaos in a generation. Fears that the Fed could cause something in the global economy or financial system to “break” have inspired some to question whether the Fed can successfully whip inflation by hiking interest rates by the most aggressive pace in decades without causing collateral damage.
"Yes there's stress, yes it's going to get worse, and yes there's going to be failure,” is the frank assessment of the state of the financial sector from Keith Skeoch, a City grandee and former chief executive of investment giant Standard Life Aberdeen.
The new California 'tax refund' isn't really a tax refund. But what is it? The uncertainty is why the taxability question is hard to answer.
While the rest of 2022 is likely to be volatile, the outlook for a year and beyond is much brighter, according to UBS’ chief investment officer for the Americas.
“The pendulum has swung too far in the other direction,” he told CNBC.
Wall Street headed toward the end of a bumpy week with another broad sell-off Friday morning after a government report showed continued strength in the job market, suggesting the Federal Reserve's campaign of aggressive interest rate hikes will continue. On Friday morning, PayPal Holding (NASDAQ: PYPL) slipped by as much as 3.7%, SoFi Technologies (NASDAQ: SOFI) slumped as much as 5.3%, and Upstart (NASDAQ: UPST) was down by as much as 8.4%. The monthly jobs report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics showed that U.S. nonfarm payroll jobs jumped by 263,000 on a seasonally adjusted basis in September, slightly below the 275,000 predicted by economists.
The governor said he will call a special session of the state legislature to address the state’s highest-in-the-nation gasoline prices.
There were more than 5,600 insolvencies in the second quarter of the year.
Britain risks rolling blackouts this winter, warns National Grid Is Kwarteng really letting us keep more of our money? FTSE 100 rises 0.2pc Ambrose Evans-Pritchard: Let King Charles go to campaign on climate as head of the Commonwealth Sign up here for our daily business briefing newsletter
Liz Truss has ordered ministers to reduce the number of government agencies as part of a cost-cutting exercise designed to tackle the budget deficit.
Will a recession hit in 2023? For months, economists have been warning that things could take a notable turn for the worse next year as the Federal Reserve moves forward with aggressive interest rate hikes. While it's easy enough to make the case for a near-term recession, the reality is that today's job market is very strong.
(Bloomberg) — Britain’s finance minister Kwasi Kwarteng travels to Washington next week for the International Monetary Fund’s annual meetings with relations in as parlous a state as they have been since the UK begged for a bail out in 1976.The chancellor of the exchequer will have to mount a defense of the annual £43 billion ($48 billion) stimulus package that triggered last month’s rout in UK assets. The fund has questioned why Kwarteng would add fuel to an economy at the moment when the Bank
Millions of California taxpayers are about to get some inflation relief. The Golden state is sending up to 23 million California residents “inflation relief” checks of up to $1,050 to ease the financial burden of the highest U.S. inflation in the past 41 years. “We know it’s expensive right now, and California is putting money back into your pockets to help,” California Governor Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, said in a statement on Thursday.
A flurry of Wall Street reactions hit our inboxes after the Labor Department released its September jobs report on Friday. Yahoo Finance rounded up some of what we got.
(Bloomberg) — US equity earnings are behaving similarly to the run-up to previous recessions, tallying with multiple leading indicators showing the US is on track for an economic slump.Most Read from BloombergBiden Says Putin Threats Real, Could Spark Nuclear ‘Armageddon’Biden Should Hit Saudi Arabia Where It Really HurtsStock Traders Hit Sell Button on Hawkish Fed Bets: Markets WrapFacebook Is Warning 1 Million Users About Stolen Usernames, PasswordsNATO Once Feared a Putin Victory. Now It Wor
The Federal Reserve looks almost certain to deliver a fourth straight 75-basis point interest rate hike next month after a closely watched report Friday showed its aggressive rate hikes so far this year have done little to cool the U.S. labor market. Pricing of futures tied to the Fed's policy rate implied a 92% chance that the Fed will raise its policy rate, now at 3%-3.25%, to a 3.75%-4% range when it meets Nov. 1-2. That was up from about an 85% chance seen before the Labor Department report, which showed employers added a larger-than-expected 263,000 jobs last month and the unemployment rate fell to 3.5% from 3.7%.