Commercial Property

Check out this hot business district that can potentially overturn Central

An office from this area houses Facebook amongst its other blockbuster tenants.

Check out this hot business district that can potentially overturn Central

An office from this area houses Facebook amongst its other blockbuster tenants.

Mega industrial transactions hit $8.02b in Q4

Investors are pitching in as the government eyes an industrial revitalisation scheme.

Acquisition of Central skyscraper may post the largest property loan at $33b since 2015

A Chinese-led consortium is seeking to acquire billionaire Li Ka-shing’s The Center.

Which sector dominated the year-end capital market?

The biggest deal from this sector was valued at $40.3b.

Agile's property management unit plans $4.7b Hong Kong IPO

Shares of A-Living Services Co Ltd will be priced at $10.80 to $14.20 apiece.

Prime office rents in Admiralty up 10.9% in December

Rents cost $112.1 psf beating Central to post the largest annual change in office submarkets.

Vacancy rate for Grade-A offices up to 5.1% in December

However, vacancy tightened in highly-sought after Central and Hong Kong East.

Here's why rate hikes are unlikely to shake Hong Kong's heated property market

Bloomberg reports that abundant liquidity acts a shield amongst other buffers.

Ladycode is making waves in the fashion industry

While the second-hand luxury market is in full swing in the West, it is yet to be recognised in most parts of Asia.

Retail sales up 7.5% to $38.7b in November

Thanks to a revival in mainland tourist arrivals, retail sales post its strongest growth in two years.

Commercial property transaction volume hit $794.04b in Q4

A series of mega-value transactions boosted this quarter’s figures as 14 deals were valued over $1b.

Warehouse rents rise 0.3% in Q4 amidst robust demand for storage space

Tech manufacturers drove higher levels of leasing activity this quarter.

Net absorption for grade A office hits 603,900 sq ft in Q4

Heightened leasing activity in Central was due to new leases by Chinese financial companies.