Finance & economics | Looking peaky

Hong Kong’s property slump may be terminal

Demographics and geopolitics will make a recovery harder

Cheap viewsPhotograph: AP
|Hong Kong

Luxury homes high on the Peak, a verdant mountain towering over Hong Kong, have long been above the cares and concerns of the rest of the city: residents look down from sprawling mansions onto the dense knot of tower blocks in which most people live. But recent property woes have brought even the loftiest areas down to Earth. The family of one indebted property investor sold eight swanky Peak properties between July and October for around half the price they might have fetched a couple of years ago.

Explore more

This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Looking peaky”

From the November 30th 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition
Commercial trucks cross over the Ambassador Bridge from Detroit, Michigan to Windsor, Ontario

Trump’s tariff turbulence is worse than anyone imagined

Even his concessions are less generous than expected

Illustration of a gold bar with human-like arms and legs, wearing a gold medal.

Why silver is the new gold

Safe-haven demand and solar panels have sent its price soaring


US-POLITICS-TRUMP-ECONOMY-CLIMATE-ENERGY

Trump’s new tariffs are his most extreme ever

America targets its three biggest trading partners: Canada, Mexico and China


El Salvador’s wild crypto experiment ends in failure 

Its curtailment is the price of an IMF bail-out. And one worth paying 

America is at risk of a Trumpian economic slowdown

Protectionist threats and erratic policies are combining to hurt growth

India has undermined a popular myth about development

Extreme poverty in the country has dropped to negligible levels