New residential supply to reach 67,000 units in next 3 or 4 years
Hong Kong's housing starts of private homes reached 18,600 units in 2012, up 80 percent from the 10,300 in the previous year, representing the highest number since 2000, government figures showed on Friday.
The total number of registered completed residential units was 10,100 last year, slightly higher than the 9,400 in 2011, but fell short of the 13,400 in 2010, according to a Transport and Housing Bureau report.
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The government report also revealed that the number of new completed units rose quarter-on-quarter during 2012. In the fourth quarter of last year, a total of 4,000 new home units were completed in the city, which compared with 3,800, 1,700, and 600 registered respectively in the previous quarters.
Totalling up all unsold completed units, those still under construction, as well as the potential supply from disposed land, total new private home supply will reach 67,000 units in the next three or four years, said the government.
Wong Leung-sing, an associate director from Research Department with Centaline Property Agency, said the outcome mirrored Hong Kong government's efforts in boosting land supply since 2011.
"The number of total completed residential units will continue to rise over the next few years, and is expected to register at 13,000 in 2013 over the 10,100 in 2012, and eventually reach the government's target of 20,000 by 2016," Wong told China Daily in a telephone interview.
Underscoring housing as his top policy priority, Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying in his maiden Policy Address in January unveiled a multi-prong approach to boost land supply The plan will offer 35,000 more units of new public and private homes in the next five years, compared with the previous corresponding period.
But the increasing new home supply is not expected to effectively cool the heated property market in the city. The latest Centa-City Lending Index (CCL) that measures overall local secondary residential property prices surged 2.11 percent - the largest weekly percentage gains in 101 weeks - to 118.38 upon its release on Friday, according to data released by Centaline Property Agency.
The latest reading surpassed the previous high of 116.81 registered before the government unveiled the new round of curbs on the property market in October which imposed a 10 to 20 percent Special Stamp Duty (SSD) on short term home resales within a three-year period and also slapped an unprecedented 15 percent Buyer's Stamp Duty (BSD) on home buyers who were not permanent Hong Kong residents.
"Property prices surged on a number of factors, including the influx of hot money, which is out of the Hong Kong government's control," said Wong, who believes that the government's initiatives, which could boost new home developments in the city, may still lack the timely effect in cooling home prices.
litao@chinadailyhk.com