http://www.businesstimes.com.sg/prem...arket-20130117

Published January 17, 2013

HK boosts land supply to cool hot property market


[HONG KONG] Embattled Hong Kong leader Leung Chun-ying made his maiden policy speech yesterday, unveiling policies aimed at reviving his battered reputation, such as increasing land supply to cool a hot property market, fighting pollution and boosting welfare.

Mr Leung will be hoping the populist policies will shore up his political future after several scandals, mass protests, and a failed impeachment in his first six months in office.

Yesterday, hundreds of protesters surrounded the legislature as Mr Leung spoke, some demanding he resign and take stronger measures to make housing prices affordable again.

The former British colony's soaring property prices, among the world's highest, have seen the spread of cage homes, wire mesh hutches stacked on top of each other and cubicle apartments as the city's residents are forced out of the market.

"Land shortage has seriously stifled our social and economic development and smothered many opportunities for people to start and expand their businesses," Mr Leung said, noting that some 200,000 people were now on waiting lists for public housing.

"As long as the housing shortage persists, we have no alternative but to restrict external demand and curb speculative activities," he added in a two-hour speech that laid out his long-term blueprint for the remainder of his five-year term.

Mr Leung said more land would be rezoned for housing and new areas opened up for development, with 67,000 private units expected to come on to the market in the next three to four years.

A target of some 100,000 subsidised public housing units would be built in the five years from 2018, in addition to the 75,000 already planned in the coming five years. In one project 2,000 to 3,000 hectres of land will be made available for housing by reclaiming land outside Victoria Harbour.

Hong Kong and Singapore, fierce rivals as financial and wealth centres in Asia, are both struggling with over-heated property markets that have driven housing prices beyond the reach of many locals.

Both cities have identical 15 per cent levies to slow foreign money into property, but the curbs on residential real estate could shift demand to retail and industrial, diverting billions of dollars to those sectors, as well as to housing markets in the US, Canada, Australia and Malaysia.

However, some analysts said Mr Leung's latest property moves would have little immediate impact.

"I don't feel there is a big difference. Everything is the same. The direction of increasing supply too. But short term it wouldn't change the property prices," said Citic Securities analyst Adrian Ngan.

Hong Kong's upcoming budget in late February could give details on further property and economic measures. - Reuters