New Zealand
Hong Kong residential sales hit 4,137 units in August
NOVO LAND Phase 1B in Tuen Mun was oversubscribed by about 48 times.
Hong Kong residential sales hit 4,137 units in August
NOVO LAND Phase 1B in Tuen Mun was oversubscribed by about 48 times.
5 key trends to watch out for in New Zealand’s office property market
One of them is medium lease terms, with 81% of new leases ranging from 1-6 years.
Flight to quality supports office rental growth in Auckland
Average prime rents rose 1% to NZD 521 per sqm per annum in Q3 2021.
New Zealand property transaction volumes down 36% in 2020
Quality office and industrial assets attracted 42% and 40% of total transactions, respectively.
Global residential prices growing at their fastest rate in three years
New Zealand posted the highest annual price growth in APAC at 19%.
Auckland, Seoul, Manila record highest prime residential price increases in APAC
Luxury home prices in Auckland increased 17.5% in 2020.
APAC prime residential prices maintain rise amidst pandemic
Auckland leads index in Q4 2020, with prime growth of 18%.
Auckland records fastest rising prime residential prices at 13% in the year to Q3
Manila is a close second with a 10% increase in prime prices. A surge in demand post-lockdown as luxury homeowners re-evaluate where they want to be and the type of property they want to live in has boosted sales and supported luxury prices across several key markets. According to Knight Frank, the index increased by 1.6% in the year to Q3 2020 with 62% of cities continuing to see prime prices increase year-on-year. That said, the percentage of cities registering annual price declines is creeping up, from 23% at the end of 2019 to 38% in Q3 2020. Here’s more from Knight Frank: Auckland (13%) leads the index, but what is notable is the resilience of a number of cities including Manila (10%), Seoul (7%), the Swiss cities of Zurich (7%) and Geneva (6%), Stockholm (5%) as well as the recovery of Chinese cities such as Shenzhen (9%) and Shanghai (6%). It is perhaps not surprising that traditional safe havens, countries that are considered to have handled the pandemic efficiently or applied a lighter touch, plus those markets that are already witnessing an economic rebound have moved higher in the rankings. With travel restrictions in place across much of the world this demand remains primarily domestic in nature. North America not only has three cities in the top ten annual rankings – Toronto (8%), Vancouver (7%) and Los Angeles (6%) but the region has snatched the crown of strongest-performing world region from Australasia this quarter. Vancouver’s recovery continues to surprise having sat low in the rankings for the last four years following the introduction of a 20% foreign buyer tax. Low mortgage rates and pent up demand released post-lockdown saw sales across Greater Vancouver reach 3,643 in September, up 56% year-on-year. In an age of uncertainty, buyers are looking more favourably at luxury property, mirroring what we saw in 2008. With equity markets volatile, Brexit looming large, the repercussions from the US presidential election expected to rumble on, and further waves of the pandemic hitting Europe and the US, property’s credentials as a safe and tangible asset class are rising to the fore.