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New World Development puts 18 units up for sale at its recently completed Cheung Sha Wan office tower

  • The first 18 units have been priced from HK$7.2 million to HK$22.7 million, or around HK$12,000 to HK$14,000 per square foot, NWD says
  • Wing Hong Street in Cheung Sha Wan is a former industrial area that is being redeveloped as a commercial hub

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An artist’s impression of New World Development’s new office building in Cheung Sha Wan. Photo: Handout
Hong Kong property developer New World Development (NWD) is selling 18 units in a recently completed grade A office project in Kowloon.
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The project, located at 83 Wing Hong Street in Cheung Sha Wan, has been developed by a joint venture between NWD and Ares SSG, the local unit of US private-equity firm Ares Management, which has a 51 per cent stake in the project. Ares SSG bought the stake from NWD for HK$3.078 billion (US$393.4 million) in September 2022, according to filings made to the Hong Kong stock exchange.

The building has 28 floors, with a total area of 18,946 to 19,216 sq ft on each floor. The first 18 units have been priced from HK$7.2 million to HK$22.7 million, or around HK$12,000 to HK$14,000 per square foot, NWD said in a statement on Thursday. These units range in size from 548 sq ft to 1,626 sq ft of gross floor area.

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The sale comes amid weakening sentiment in Hong Kong’s office market. According to JLL’s monthly report for April, the overall vacancy rate of office buildings rose to 13.1 per cent as of the end of March, partly due to the completion of Six Pacific Place in Wan Chai and Viva Place in Wong Chuk Hang. Rent growth dropped 0.7 per cent month-on-month as of March 24 to an average monthly rent of HK$50.60 per square foot.

It also coincides with a delay in highly anticipated cuts to interest rates by the US Federal Reserve. The Hong Kong Monetary Authority, the city’s de facto central bank, has to conduct its monetary policy in lockstep with the Fed to preserve the city’s currency peg with the US dollar, which has been in place since 1983. This means that Hong Kong must keep its rates high if the Fed maintains a high cost of funding.

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