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Hong Kong property
PropertyHong Kong & China

Discounted Hong Kong development does not match demand for smaller apartments, fails to sell out

  • Only 171 out of 228 units on sale at Mayfair by The Sea 8 sold on Wednesday
  • Average price after discounts about 26.5 per cent lower than that fetched by another project in Tai Po in June last year

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Buyers line up for the 228 apartments on offer at the Mayfair By The Sea 8 development from Sino Land, in Hong Kong’s Tsim Sha Tsui district. Photo: Handout
Lam Ka-sing

Hong Kong developer Sino Land managed to sell only 75 per cent of apartments put up for sale at heavy discounts at its Mayfair by The Sea 8 development in Tai Po. By 3pm on Wednesday, it had sold 171 out of a first batch of 228 units.

The sale comes amid warnings by analysts about further declines in prices. And at an average price of HK$13,228 (US$1,686) per square foot after the discount in the first price list, the property is going for 26.5 per cent less than the HK$18,000 fetched by St Martin, another Tai Po project launched in June last year.

According to Centaline Property Agency, one of Hong Kong’s largest, this shortfall is down to a high supply of three-bedroom apartments in the Pak Shek Kok area.

“Two-bedroom flats were popular and sold quickly, but the three-bedroom apartments are proving difficult to sell, because there are [plenty of] choices [in the area],” said Louis Chan, chief executive of the residential division at Centaline. The development was also designed as a luxury residential area, and does not match the needs of first-time buyers looking for smaller flats. Among the 228 apartments on sale on Wednesday, 130 are two-bedroom units and 96 are three-bedroom units.

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Prices at Mayfair start at HK$6.07 million for a 490 sq ft apartment, or HK$12,396 per square foot. The development received 1,189 registrations of interest, which means more than five people were competing for an apartment.

Analysts, meanwhile, once again warned of a slowdown in economic growth in Hong Kong thanks to rising interest rates in the United States, and the trade war between Washington and Beijing.

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