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New World Development seeks to tap withdrawal of double stamp duty, puts West Kowloon office tower on the market

  • The grade A building will be priced at HK$13,000 to HK$14,500 per square foot, agents say
  • NWD will refund stamp duty paid by buyers of entire floors

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An artist’s impression of the building at 888 Lai Chi Kok Road. Photo: Handout

Hong Kong conglomerate New World Development (NWD) is selling a grade A, 28-storey office building in the city’s first commercial property sale after it withdrew double stamp duty on non-residential property last month.

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The building at 888 Lai Chi Kok Road in West Kowloon will be completed in 2022 and is expected to have a gross floor area of 580,600 sq ft. It will be priced at HK$13,000 (US$1,677) to HK$14,500 per square foot, Centaline Commercial and Midland Commercial, the agents, said. The former is operated by Centaline Property Agency, and the latter is Midland Realty’s commercial arm. NWD won the land for HK$4.03 billion in 2017.

“The price has been set at an attractive level, to lure buyers looking to bet on the upbeat sentiment in the commercial property market following the scrapping of the double stamp duty,” said James Mak, district sales director at Midland Commercial.

Hong Kong scrapped the duty, officially known as Doubled Ad Valorem Stamp Duty (DSD), last month. The levy, introduced in February 2013 to curb speculative activity, doubled or increased stamp duty rates across the board. From November 26, these have reverted to their original rates, a move that is being viewed as cutting transaction costs and breathing new life into a market hit by last year’s anti-government protests, the Covid-19 pandemic and Hong Kong’s worst recession on record.

“The office market is bottoming out – both leasing and sales deals have more than doubled since the government announced the withdrawal of the double stamp duty,” Mak said. “It will not surprise me if the first batch is snapped up quickly, once sales start in the next couple of days,” he added.

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An artist’s impression of the building at 888 Lai Chi Kok Road. Photo: Handout
An artist’s impression of the building at 888 Lai Chi Kok Road. Photo: Handout
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