Hong Kong real estate regains appeal with international investors as they target hotels, industrial assets in 2022, CBRE survey shows
- Hong Kong was the sixth most attractive property investment destination in a poll of some 30 cities in Asia-Pacific, after dropping out of the top 10 last year
- Some US$11.3 billion worth of property deals were concluded in Hong Kong last year, up from US$8.6 billion in 2020, according to Real Capital Analytics

Hong Kong is back in favour among property investors, as it rejoins a list of the 10 most attractive investment destinations in Asia-Pacific in 2022 after failing to make the cut last year, according to a report by CBRE.
The city placed sixth in a poll of about 30 cities in the region, a marked improvement after dropping out of the list last year. In 2020, Hong Kong came eighth after investor confidence was affected by social unrest the previous year.
“Interest in Sydney and Hong Kong SAR was stronger compared to last year’s survey,” according to the report. “Hong Kong SAR has seen the return of international capital, particularly to the industrial and hotel sector for repositioning plays, as investors look to capitalise on price discounts in these sectors.”
This year there will be “growing interest from investors looking to purchase hotels for conversion into multifamily rental assets, serviced apartments or co-living space in urban areas, driven by strong end-user demand from young professionals wanting to move out from the family home to their own private spaces closer to work”, according to Reeves Yan, executive director and head of capital markets at CBRE Hong Kong.
However, with Hong Kong clinging to its zero Covid-19 policy amid the more transmissible Omicron variant, the hotel segment’s prospects are likely to be adversely affected this year, according to Marcos Chan, executive director and head of research at CBRE Hong Kong.
Hong Kong’s property sector has been regained some stability after being battered by the twin woes of social unrest and the Covid-19 pandemic. In 2021, local and cross-border investors acquired US$11.3 billion worth of property in the city, an increase of about a third from US$8.6 billion in 2020, according to Real Capital Analytics, which tracks deals worth at least US$10 million.