Who’s to blame? Hong Kong office glut to worsen as developers add fresh supply in 2025
Some 3 million square feet of supply will hit the market next year, likely delaying any recovery in office rentals, analysts say
While businesses are not recovering fast enough to fill up the floors, the city’s landlords including Sun Hung Kai Properties, Mandarin Oriental Hotel/Hongkong Land, and SEA Holdings are partly to blame for the glut.
“In light of the supply overhang, it will remain a tenants’ market in 2025,” said Marcos Chan, executive director and head of research at CBRE Hong Kong. “The new supply will lead to higher vacancy by end-2025. Rents are expected to come down by roughly another 5 per cent in 2025.”
Sun Hung Kai will put 2.1 million sq ft of space into the market next year, when its International Gateway Centre in Tsim Sha Tsui is completed, according to consultancy Cushman & Wakefield. One Causeway Bay, a Mandarin Oriental and Hongkong Land project, will add 410,400 sq ft, while SEA Holdings will inject 310,700 sq ft from its Kowloon East development.