Singapore home rents catch up with Hong Kong’s as fortunes of rival business hubs diverge
- Hong Kong home rents are just 12.8 per cent higher than those in Singapore as the gap narrows from the 82 per cent difference witnessed five years ago
- Rents are seen rising in the two cities at an identical pace as Singapore’s stamp duties and Hong Kong’s high down payment requirement make outright purchases costly
In 2018, before Hong Kong was hit by an unprecedented wave of social unrest, the rental gulf between the two cities was as high as 82 per cent, with Hong Kong widely labelled as the world’s most unaffordable housing market.
That chasm has shrivelled to about 12.8 per cent in May, with average Singapore rents at US$3.80 per sq ft while in Hong Kong rents averaged US$4.28 per sq ft.
At one point – in the first quarter of the year – the gap had narrowed to as little as 6 per cent with rents in Singapore at about US$3.78 per square feet, nearly catching up with Hong Kong’s US$4 per sq ft.
The outflows continued over the next three years with Hong Kong enforcing some of the strictest Covid-19 restrictions in the world, a factor which also hastened waves of emigration with both locals and expatriates relocating either temporarily or permanently.
Last year, Hong Kong’s population dropped 0.9 per cent to 7.33 million from 2021, according to government data released in February. It was the third straight year of population decline and the resultant diminished pool of tenants and homebuyers had an impact on the property market.
Meanwhile, Singapore’s stability and widely-praised management of the coronavirus pandemic further burnished its reputation as a premier business hub.
Many businesses and professionals found Hong Kong’s pandemic curbs too restrictive and relocated to Singapore, which then saw higher rental demand.
Singapore’s prudent timing in reopening its economy in late 2022 was a “catalyst” for international workers’ return to the city, and demand for rental properties was further stoked by successive hikes in stamp duty rates which made property purchases more expensive, according to Knight Frank.
For the rest of the year, home rents in both Hong Kong and Singapore are likely to face upwards pressure, although Singapore rental increases could be moderated by higher property supply in a slowing economy, according Ismail Gafoor, CEO of Singapore-listed PropNex Realty. He expects about 18,000 new units to enter the property market, nearly double the number in 2022.
Still, full-year rents are forecast to rise by 5 per cent, said Tricia Song, head of research for Singapore and Southeast Asia at CBRE.
“For private homes, rents were essentially flat for the 10 years before 2022 due to oversupply and mediocre population growth,” Song said. “With future supply likely to be below historical average, higher property taxes and higher replacement costs, rents are unlikely to fall back to pre-Covid levels.”
Other analysts expect higher rental increments in Singapore.
“We are projecting rentals to grow at a pace of 10 to 12 per cent for the whole of 2023, relatively slower in comparison to 2022 where overall residential rentals grew by nearly 30 per cent for the whole year,” said PropNex’s Gafoor.
Meanwhile, Hong Kong is expected to see sustained demand for rental properties as rising interest rates and heftier down-payment requirements make outright purchases expensive.
“The relatively large lump sum of down-payments is encouraging more young expats to opt for rental housing options,” said Rosanna Tang, executive director and head of research in Hong Kong at Cushman and Wakefield. “Given the rate hike environment coupled with uncertain global economic outlook, potential homebuyers may choose to stay on the sidelines and temporarily seek rental properties instead.”
Rents are forecast to rise by 5 per cent to 8 per cent this year, boosted by demand for housing from foreign talent and non-local students relocating to the city, Tang said.