
Hong Kong's stock market has revived but what of the property sector?
Hong Kong needs all the help it can get. Since 2018, the city has suffered one shock after another, preventing a meaningful recovery from taking hold and fuelling concerns about its position as a global financial centre.
Advertisement
As an importer of US monetary policy with an economy that is far more synchronised with that of mainland China, Hong Kong has been the biggest casualty of economic and policy divergence between the world's two largest economies, prompting renewed questions about the suitability of the city's
currency peg to the US dollar.
Yet, over the past few months, a confluence of domestic and external factors has given Hong Kong a much-needed shot in the arm. The
escalation of the US-China trade war and the
damage to the US' safe haven status have provided a fillip to Hong Kong's markets, partly by buttressing the city's role as the leading offshore equity financing centre for mainland Chinese companies.
Proceeds from initial public offerings and secondary share sales in Hong Kong have reached US$26.5 billion so far this year, compared with just US$3.8 billion in the same period last year, data from Bloomberg shows. Former Morgan Stanley Asia chairman Stephen Roach, who last year said Hong Kong
was 'over' in part because of the intensification of the US-China conflict, said last week the city is benefiting from being mainland China's 'most important window to international finance'.
Furthermore, the sharp drop in the US dollar since US President Donald Trump's inauguration, coupled with deeper concerns about the safety of US assets, forced the Hong Kong Monetary Authority to
intervene aggressively to prevent the Hong Kong dollar from exceeding the upper end of its trading band against the greenback.
Advertisement
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
an hour ago
- South China Morning Post
UN needs overhaul to take on today's global challenges, former chief Ban Ki-moon says
A former UN secretary general has called for an overhaul of the United Nations to better confront global challenges as 'some powerful nations' seek to undermine the institution. Ban Ki-moon , who was secretary general of the United Nations from 2007 to 2016, said in Hong Kong on Tuesday that the conflicts in Ukraine and Gaza showed the need for a multilateral response. 'The illegal Russian war against Ukraine and the horrific war in Gaza represent one of the most dangerous moments for global security, and challenges to multilateralism, in decades,' Ban told the Fullerton Forum hosted by the University of Hong Kong's Centre on Contemporary China and the World (CCCW). Ban said that various global crises, including these conflicts, pandemics and climate change, 'have shown how we are all interconnected'. 'They also make it clear that we need multilateral responses,' he added, according to the speech published by the CCCW. In his speech, Ban thanked China for its role in implementing the Paris Climate Agreement and for its efforts to combat climate change. Ban, who is now deputy chair of The Elders, a human rights group composed of international statesmen founded by late South African president Nelson Mandela, took direct aim at US President Donald Trump, saying the shift towards unilateralism had been 'bolstered by the advent of Trumpism' in the United States.


The Standard
an hour ago
- The Standard
Police arrest 118 in major online scam crackdown
Iran warns of 'surprise' move to be 'remembered for centuries' as Middle East crisis deepens


South China Morning Post
an hour ago
- South China Morning Post
Decoding PLA moves around Taiwan: 3 categories, 3 levels of signalling?
Manoeuvres around Taiwan by the People's Liberation Army have become a routine affair, but their tempo and intensity have steadily increased in recent years. Advertisement What were occasional sorties before 2020 have evolved into a well-coordinated campaign designed not only for combat training but also for strategic signalling. But not all PLA operations around Taiwan are the same. They fall into three main categories: near-daily aerial patrols, combat-readiness patrols, and large-scale joint forces exercises – each varying in scale, intensity and purpose. So what kind of signals do each of these send? Near-daily patrols PLA Air Force sorties around Taiwan have been carried out on an almost daily basis since 2021, with a sharp increase in numbers observed since 2024, after Taiwanese leader William Lai Ching-te assumed office. Advertisement According to PLATracker, an open-source database based on Taiwanese defence ministry reports, fewer than 20 PLA aircraft entered Taiwan's air defence identification zone (ADIZ) in 2019.