Real Estate
Singapore Beats Hong Kong, Mainland China For House Price Growth

Figures from the analysis of housing markets by Knight Frank show that the three Asian jurisdictions are below the global average when it came to price growth in the 12 months to the end of June.
Singapore ranked above mainland China and Hong Kong for the
fastest pace of residential property price growth in the year to
June versus a year ago, although none of the three jurisdictions
were in the global average for percentage growth, figures from
Knight Frank
showed.
Demand for housing wasn’t held back by the COVID-19 pandemic and
may even have been boosted by it, the report said. Globally, on
average in Q2 house prices rose by 9.2 per cent, according to
figures taken from 55 countries and territories by the real
estate consultancy. The fastest house price gain was in Turkey
(29.2 per cent), followed by New Zealand (25.9 per cent), and the
US (18.6 per cent). Australia was also one of the highest gainers
in Asia-Pacific, up 16.4 per cent.
In Singapore, prices rose by 6.8 per cent, while in mainland
China they rose by 4.3 per cent and Hong Kong eked out a 2.6 per
cent gain. India actually dropped 0.5 per cent, and Spain held up
at the bottom of the list, down by 0.5 per cent.
“Despite strong price growth, there are signs of softening demand
in some markets. In the US, mortgage applications have dipped and
the share of households thinking now is a good time to buy hit a
decade-low of 28 per cent in June,” the firm said in a note.
“The prospect of interest rate rises in markets such as New
Zealand, the US and the UK is also likely to weigh on buyer
sentiment in the medium term. But conversely, recent tighter
restrictions in South East Asia, New Zealand and Australia may
yet spark renewed activity as lockdowns shine a light on homes
and lifestyles,” it said.