Apartment prices in Tokyo exceed bubble-era high to hit record

Jan 26, 2022

BLOOMBERG [TOKYO] The price of new apartments in Tokyo toppled a 30-year-old record in 2021 as rising demand from dual-income households and increasing construction costs boosted the Japanese capital's once-moribund housing market.

The mean price of new condos in the Japanese capital and surrounding areas hit 62.6 million yen (S$738,441) last year, topping the 61.2 million yen high watermark set in 1990 at the peak of the economic bubble, according to figures released Tuesday (Jan 25) by the Real Estate Economic Institute.

Some market watchers expect the surge to continue this year.

"With a shortage of land and high construction costs, supply is not likely to jump anytime soon," said Ryuta Hayakawa, a manager at Sumitomo Realty & Development. "Considering the demand, it's unlikely that prices will fall."

Before Japan entered its prolonged economic slump, land prices were so high that Tokyo's Imperial Palace was reputed to be worth more than all the land in California.

Apartment prices collapsed in the wake of the bubble bursting, losing more than 1/3 in value in just 5 years, and remained largely flat for the next 2 decades.

But in the years since then-Prime Minister Shinzo Abe came to power in 2012, new apartment prices have surged.

Abe's fiscal stimulus, as well as the Bank of Japan's unprecedented monetary easing, helped rekindle interest in the real estate market, with condo prices defying otherwise stagnant inflation to rise more than 1/3.

The recent increase has also been fuelled by pre-pandemic demand from overseas buyers, particularly from China, as well as greater interest in better living quarters as professionals spend more time at home due to Covid and a recent dearth of supply.

Real estate is running hotter than other assets in Japan. The nation's stock market has yet to reclaim its bubble-era highs, though benchmarks did touch 30-year records last year.

More than 600 apartments at Harumi Flag, a real estate development that housed athletes and delegations during the Tokyo Olympic Games last year, sold out the day they went on sale.

Responding to the demand, the government plans to trim tax breaks for homeowners from next year.

Despite Tokyo's expensive reputation, the decades of stagnation combined with the relatively easy availability of 35-year mortgages at ultra-low interest rates, means city-centre apartments remain within the reach of working professional couples, unlike those in many other large cities around the world.

The rise of high-earning, dual-income households as more women enter the workforce has also been cited among the reasons for rising property prices in urban regions.

Co-working couples now make up more than 2/3 of all households, a 180-degree reversal of the trend during the bubble era.

Media have dubbed the phenomenon as "power couples," with Naoko Kuga of NLI Research Institute defining them as those in which each partner earns more than 7 million yen. "While the overall number of 'power couples' is small, their willingness to spend is strong, and their impact on the consumer market cannot be ignored," she wrote in a report this month.

Developers are also seeing extremely high interest for luxury apartments, according to Sumitomo Realty's Hayakawa.

Demand for these condos, which cost more than 200 million yen and have sizes of over 100 sq m (1,076 sq ft), is rising not just in the Tokyo region, but also in cities such as Osaka and Sapporo in Hokkaido, he said.