Off the wire
South Korean Olympic committee upholds ban on star swimmer Park  • Chinese company, banks back Malaysia's future high speed rail terminal project  • Kenya puts in place measures to strengthen child protection: official  • French riot police arrest 323 soccer fans on violence charges  • ICBC, Czech sign deal on Europe fund for investment cooperation  • Danish catalytic converter plant opens in N China  • China moves to reduce non-ferrous metal overcapacity  • Beijing PM2.5 density down by 19.3 percent Jan.-May  • Regulator approves Midea's takeover bid for German firm  • Revenue of S. Korean companies falls for 8 quarters on sluggish exports  
You are here:   Home

HK outstrips London to become world's most expensive office market: report

Xinhua, June 16, 2016 Adjust font size:

China's Hong Kong has become the world's most expensive office market due to lack of space in prime areas and stronger demand from the mainland financial firms, according to a recent report released by leading commercial property and real estate services adviser CBRE.

CBRE Research's semi-annual Global Prime Office Occupancy Costs survey released here Wednesday showed that Hong Kong Central's overall prime occupancy costs 290 U.S. dollars per sq. ft. per annum, topping the "most expensive" list and displacing London's West End (262 U.S. dollars per sq. ft.), which dropped to the second place.

Beijing's Finance Street (188 U.S. dollars per sq. ft.), Beijing's Central Business District (182 U.S. dollars per sq. ft.) and Hong Kong's West Kowloon (179 U.S. dollars per sq. ft.) rounded out the top five, according to the report.

The study also found that the Hong Kong markets had the largest and third-largest year-on-year prime occupancy cost increase among the 126 cities surveyed, with Hong Kong's West Kowloon rising 19.5 percent and Hong Kong's Central District up 14.2 percent, respectively.

"A lack of space in prime areas in Hong Kong, coupled with stronger demand, particularly from mainland financial firms, allowed landlords to push rents upward in the 12 month period through to end June," said Rhodri James, executive director of Advisory and Transactions Services Office, CBRE Hong Kong.

However, weaker demand is now causing growth rates to decelerate, James said, adding CBRE envisages slightly lower rents in some areas next year although Central should prove more resilient given the lack of development in the area. Endit