Hong Kong to abolish double stamp duty on commercial property in move designed to boost small firms’ cash flows
- The measure is expected to help companies receive a fair price for their assets
- The stamp duty for residential property will remain unchanged
The Hong Kong government is expected to abolish the double stamp duty for commercial property in a move seen as helping small and medium companies shore up their cash flows amid the city’s worst economic crisis on record.
Introduced to tackle speculative practices in February 2013, the double stamp duty – officially known asDoubled Ad Valorem Stamp Duty (DSD) – is charged at different rates that depend on asset prices. It doubled or increased stamp duty rates across the board.
The measure is expected to help companies receive a fair price for their assets. Businesses, particularly those in re-exports, retail and travel, need money, said Jeffrey Lam Kin-fung, a member of the city’s Legislative Council. Businesses in general have found it difficult to borrow in the current economic climate. And when firms try to sell assets to shore up their cash flows, potential buyers, aware of the stamp duty, “talk down prices because they know you are probably in a rush [to sell]”, he added.