Mortgage registrations in Hong Kong hit record low in 2024, Centaline says
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Mortgage registrations in Hong Kong dropped to the lowest level on record last year, as the city’s property market suffered from high interest rates and a decline in real estate prices, according to Centaline Property.
Owners registered a total of 47,917 mortgage contracts for assets including private flats, home-ownership scheme flats, parking spaces, shops, industrial facilities and offices, the least since records began in 2000, according to Yeung Ming-yee, a senior associate director at Centaline. The data excluded uncompleted flats.
Registrations for lived-in homes fell 17.6 per cent to 16,536 from a year earlier, the lowest since 2010 when the firm started tracking them. The number has declined for three consecutive years, amounting to a cumulative 60 per cent retreat from 2021, she said.
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Despite the annual setback, market sentiment improved towards the end of the year when registrations surged 35 per cent sequentially in December to 3,928, ending a four-month slump. Mortgages on residential properties made up 79 per cent of them with equal contribution from the primary and secondary market.
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