In a world of zero interest rates, some things are bound to go wrong. In Hong Kong's case, very wrong.
On the surface, everything is great. The economy is growing 6.5 per cent, confounding the sceptics. It is good to be the gateway to China's boom while the most developed economies fret about a double-dip recession.
Yet that proximity comes with a price, and a growing one. Few doubt that Hong Kong has a property bubble on its hands. Home prices have surged about 47 per cent since the start of 2009. Who is buying? Wealthy mainland Chinese.
The other force inflating Hong Kong's bubble is near-zero US interest rates, given a currency peg to the US dollar. Taken together, they are putting Hong Kong on the front line of economies grappling to navigate this world of zero.
A year ago, many thought an apartment selling for $HK24.5 million ($3.3 million) was the peak. A one-bedroom, 76-square-metre flat in the Kowloon district going for such a sum had insanity written all over it. Think again; Hong Kong property is still on the rise.
This month the chief executive of the Hong Kong Monetary Authority, Norman Chan, said risks in the property market may exceed those in 1997, the height of a previous bubble that was followed by a six-year slump that more than halved values.
The market, Mr Chan said last week, has been rising ''quite rapidly'' and may collapse if prices keep going up. Mr Chan joined the Financial Secretary, John Tsang, in cautioning about asset imbalances that have had the government raising down-payment ratios and pledging to increase land supply to rein things in.
Far more aggressive action may be needed. Any perception that home prices can rise indefinitely is always dangerous: look at the US before the subprime meltdown. What concerns many Hong Kong investors is that official action thus far has been rhetorical and cosmetic, not substantive.
It is a touchy issue in Hong Kong, an economy that many see as a huge property market sprinkled with high-paying industries - like investment banking - that ultimately support real estate. Just as low government bond yields hold Japan's economy together, exuberant property is the succour that keeps Hong Kong's blood flowing.
Mr Tsang and Mr Chan would have some serious explaining to do if steps they took derailed the market. The politically connected tycoons who tower over Hong Kong, like Li Ka-shing, would not be happy. And yet that may be precisely what is needed to stabilise things.
A first step could be to scrap the peg to the US dollar. It is not clear that is even on the radar screen. The idea is that the policy has served Hong Kong well since 1983, so why mess with success? In a more perfect world, a peg to the Chinese yuan would make more sense.
Thanks to the dollar peg, mortgage rates in Hong Kong have been at about a 20-year low. If you are a mainland investor with a few million dollars lying around, Hong Kong property has been an obvious bet. And even if Hong Kong is hot, it is less of a bubble than, say, Shanghai. For now, at least.
Unsustainably low interest rates seemed necessary at the depths of 2008, when all hell was breaking loose in credit markets. The risk now is that the world is getting used to them, just as businesses and politicians in Japan did.
Free money drives investors into riskier assets and inflates asset prices. It means any global recovery may lead to another bubble. Growth underpinned by bubbles rarely lasts very long.
In a sense, zero rates bail out the wrong end of the market. Economies such as those of the US and Japan need consumers to spend more to boost growth and stabilise prices.
Ultra-low rates penalise households as interest on savings evaporates. And so, rates at current levels are cannibalising recoveries.
The bigger risk is that the bursting of the latest bubble will trigger a chain reaction. The events of the past 15 years should be a reminder to Asian officials not to be complacent.
Hong Kong property prices peaked in 1997 as the city slid into its first recession in more than a decade at the start of the Asian financial crisis. Understandably, officials do not want to cause another plunge.
Waiting may make things worse. Hong Kong home prices rose to their highest since December 1997 in the week ended September 5, the Centaline Property Agency says. Since the government's actions to calm the market on August 13, prices have exceeded estimates in big land auctions. And the Hang Seng Property Index has gained almost 7 per cent since then.
If policy makers are not careful, $HK24.5 million million flats will become too common for comfort. And it will be too late to avoid another crash.
Bloomberg
Link here:
http://www.smh.com.au/business/l ... 20100921-15ld5.html