Real Estate not sure thing ? Just imagine waiting 13 years excluding interest ...
Hong Kong luxury real estate prices rise above 1997 peak By Leah Hyslop
Prices for luxury property in Hong Kong have surpassed their 1997 peak for the first time.
The average price for a home of around 100 square metres (1,100 square feet) is now 13.8 per cent higher than in the third quarter of 1997.
Demand for homes is so great in the crowded city that there are fears of a property bubble developing - with some experts suggesting it already has.
Earlier this month, the city's chief executive Donald Tsang introduced measures intended to slow the property market, including stopping automatic residency for wealthy property buyers, many of whom come from mainland China.
Simon Smith, head of research and consultancy at Savills, Hong Kong said: “The government is struggling to find an effective policy response to rising prices.
Limited new supply of housing, low interest rates and increasing numbers of mainland buyers are all helping to push values to record highs. It looks like this is something we will have to live with for the time being.â€
The Asian crisis began in 1997, when Thailand's currency, the baht, collapsed. It started less than 24 hours after the UK had ceded sovereignity of Hong Kong to China, and caused widespread economic problems, during which house prices in Hong Kung
sunk by around 60 per cent. The housing slump
lasted for six years, but since 2003, prices have been gradually increasing. Although the price of homes was affected by the global recession, Hong Kong has weathered the past two years remarkably well, with the average home actually increasing its price by more than 45 per cent in that time.
According to Mercer's Cost of Living survey 2010, Hong Kong is now the
eighth most expensive city in the world, and third most expensive city in Asia, after
Tokyo and Osaka. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/pers ... -peak.html
It's all about "how much you made when you were right" & "how little you lost when you were wrong"