13/12/2017-3

Small residential property prices next year, Air jumped 10%

The market is optimistic about the prospects of Hong Kong’s residential market. Savills predicts that although the property market will be troubled by the rate hike next year, the impact will not be large. There will be a modest increase in property prices for small and medium-sized apartments throughout the year, an increase of 5-10%.

The first Pacific Davis Yuan Zhiguang (third from right) material, the market has digested the rate hike, I believe that little effect. The second left is Chen Chao country.

Expected to raise interest rates slightly affected

Yuan Zhiguang, deputy managing director of the bank, expects banks in Hong Kong have the opportunity to adjust the prime rate, but the market has digested the rate hike, I believe little effect, but also expected next year, small and medium-sized residential property prices will record mild increase of 500 million yuan Super mansion, expected volume is small, but optimistic about the property prices of these properties can rise 10 to 15% for all types of property in the largest increase in categories.

In his view, the large property market will continue to prosper next year, mainly involving whole blocks of commercial buildings, shopping malls and government offices. Purchasing power will come from the domestic, Hong Kong and fund companies returning to the Hong Kong market. This also reflects the fact that the investment opportunities in the Mainland are not many.

Consider the proportion of home buyers rebound

Four percent of citizens consider home ownership

Land exchange new normalcy. Chen Chaoguo, managing director of valuation and professional advisory services, said in the future that the government will tend to launch large-scale land projects in the future. Many of them are located on or near the railway superstores. They admit that land prices are “a good base for billions of yuan” and believe “billions of dollars have become New normal, will often happen. ”

Acting an online survey also reflects the public Di Air property market. Lee Chi Shing, chief executive of Hong Kong home ownership, said the public is willing to enter the market