Shop rentals fall as mainlanders avoid HK
A DROP in Chinese mainland tourist numbers is driving down shop rentals in Hong Kong, with vacancies increasing in the same prime areas that just three years ago pipped New York’s Fifth Avenue to become the world’s most expensive retail real estate.
Spooked by months of cross-border tensions and pro-democracy protests, tour groups visiting Hong Kong from China’s mainland plunged about 80 percent this month, dealing a blow to the retailers that had built their businesses around these mainland visitors’ once insatiable demand.
A government crackdown on lavish spending which shows no signs of letting up has also encouraged tourists to shop further away from home, just as a drop in the yen and the won make Japan and South Korea more attractive destinations.
That has further dimmed the appeal of Hong Kong’s Causeway Bay, where renting a 46-square-meter — the size of a classroom — can cost HK$500,000 (US$64,000) a month.
“If they don’t cut the rent, I will leave,” said the head of a consumer goods chain that also has a shop in Causeway Bay. Revenues have fallen 30 percent over the past year as the number of mainland visitors fell by half, he said.
Hong Kong retail sales in January fell to their lowest level since 2003, a factor property agents said prompting more retailers to negotiate lower leases, or just move out.
The decline in sales also coincides with plans by several luxury retailers, including Chanel and Compagnie Financiere Richemont SA’s Cartier, to cut prices in Asia to counter the sharp decline in the euro.
“Their businesses aren’t doing so well, so they decided to essentially hand the keys back to landlord,” said Tom Gaffney, head of retail at property consultancy Jones Lang LaSalle.
Property consultancy Savills says average prime street shop rentals fell 8.5 percent in 2014, as the number of mainland tourists began to fall. This year, a luxury goods retailer in Causeway Bay managed to negotiate a 15 percent discount on its lease while another retailer renewed its contract on the same terms, a property agency involved in the deals said.
The slowdown is forcing many retailers to adapt. Paul Tang, the owner of a tiny shop in Causeway Bay, said sales fell 25 percent this year, forcing him to courier goods to clients on the mainland. “It’s no use sitting in my shop and crying,” he said.
A possible curb by the authorities on multiple daily visits to Hong Kong could further add to the pressure on landlords more exposed to the retail market, such as Hysan Development, Wharf Holdings Ltd and Sun Hung Kai Properties.
Day-trippers accounted for about 60 percent of the 47 million mainland visitors to Hong Kong last year often buying daily necessities such as milk powder. But some landlords are worried that protests by activists accusing mainland visitors of crowding public transport and causing shortages of goods could make things worse.
“The current political and social sentiment may diminish mainlanders’ enthusiasm to visit and shop in Hong Kong,” said Roger Hao, chief financial officer of market leader Hysan. “But Hysan has a diverse yet balanced retail portfolio ... and that should minimize the impact.”
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