Seven early warning signals in the HK property market cycle
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Hong Kong’s private property market has undergone pronounced boom–bust cycles over the last four decades, with large fluctuations in residential prices transmitting to household wealth, bank balance sheets and macroeconomic performance. Hong Kong is a small open economy, with a tight land supply, and is always magnified by external monetary and financial shocks, making property market cycle developments with a fluctuation cycle, causing market instability. This research paper synthesises existing policy and academic research to construct a seven‑indicator early warning framework for Hong Kong’s private residential property cycle, centred on: (1) valuation gaps relative to fundamentals, (2) price‑to‑income and buy‑rent measures, (3) transaction volumes and new mortgage lending, (4) credit growth and bank real‑estate exposures, (5) income‑gearing and debt‑servicing ratios, (6) sentiment and buyer‑incentive indices, and (7) the macroprudential and policy stance. By mapping these indicators to past cycles and the implementation of macroprudential measures, this research paper argues that a multi‑indicator dashboard can provide useful early warning signals of cycle vulnerabilities, which can accurately predict the property market cycle turning point.
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UAIJEBM742026FTT.pdf
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