Advertisement

Qianhai a potential investment alternative to Hong Kong

The zone near Shenzhen can provide the kind of low tax regime, strong infrastructure and gateway to the mainland that companies want

Reading Time:4 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
An 18 sq km area is being developed in Qianhai, which is being touted as a viable option to Hong Kong. Photo: Edward Wong

Despite signs of increased activity in the office market leading up to the Lunar New Year break, occupier demand in Hong Kong remains rather subdued.

Advertisement

Indeed, levels of net absorption, which measures the change in volume of occupied space, and therefore expansion and contraction, are running at around half the long-term average. This is unsurprising given the economic turbulence.

However, despite the lack of movement, vacancy rates continue to trend downwards and are below 3 per cent for the market as a whole.

Given that office markets worldwide generally require a level of vacancy of 6-8 per cent, the situation obviously remains extremely tight for occupiers.

Advertisement

It is almost six months since CBRE published a report on , which highlighted the potential shortfall in office space over the next decade, and also set out proposals to alleviate this shortage. Chief among these was the recommendation to fast-track selected sites, which we saw as being the "easy-wins" for the government and the market.

Advertisement