--- title: "Hong Kong’s plan for HKIC to prop up city’s office market seen as challenging" description: "Hong Kong's government-backed investment fund, HKIC, is being redeployed to support the struggling commercial property sector. The initiative aims to attract foreign institutions despite challenges li" type: "news" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/277538657.md" published_at: "2026-03-03T00:36:20.000Z" --- # Hong Kong’s plan for HKIC to prop up city’s office market seen as challenging > Hong Kong's government-backed investment fund, HKIC, is being redeployed to support the struggling commercial property sector. The initiative aims to attract foreign institutions despite challenges like high vacancy rates and uncertain rental recovery. Financial Secretary Paul Chan announced partnerships with long-term capital for high-quality projects. While market sentiment improved, the overall vacancy rate for grade A office space remains high at 17.5%. Analysts suggest that HKIC's move could stimulate demand in the commercial investment sector, although major funds remain cautious due to weak leasing demand and high acquisition costs. Hong Kong’s government-backed investment fund is being redeployed to support the city’s sluggish commercial property sector, signaling authorities’ growing willingness to use public funds as a policy tool to steady office valuations and align real estate investment with the city’s industrial ambitions. Attracting foreign institutions, however, might prove challenging. The city’s elevated vacancy rates, looming new completions and uncertain rental recovery have kept global funds on the sidelines, while acquisition costs – combined with the capex required for conversion – may compress returns, according to analysts. In his latest budget, Financial Secretary Paul Chan Mo-po said the Hong Kong Investment Corporation (HKIC) would partner with regional and international “long-term capital” to channel funds into “high-quality commercial projects”. According to HKIC chief executive Clara Chan Ka-chai, the strategy would create “deep synergy between industry and space”, channelling long-term capital into commercial assets. She said it is expected to support enterprise development, while delivering medium- to long-term returns. Although market sentiment saw a recovery last year and the leasing market returned to activity, the overall vacancy rate for grade A office space remains high at 17.5 per cent, with a total vacant area approaching 15 million square feet. The market still requires time to absorb the new supply completed over the past few years, according to Fiona Ngan, head of occupier services at international property consultant Colliers. Established in 2022 as a wholly government-owned investment vehicle, HKIC was created when parts of Western institutional capital were pulling back from Hong Kong amid heightened geopolitical tensions. Its initial mandate focused on strategic sectors including hard technology, life sciences and green energy, with the aim of anchoring future industries in the city. The move to redeploy HKIC’s funds confirmed an earlier South China Morning Post report. It signalled a vote of confidence in the HKIC and an expansion of its remit, while remaining strictly within the investment sphere rather than property ownership or management, according to an SCMP report last week. “The government wants to co-invest in commercial property projects that can help develop Hong Kong’s industrial and technological positioning,” said Gary Ng, a senior economist at French bank Natixis. He added that HKIC is increasingly functioning as a policy transmission tool. Hong Kong’s equity market rebounded in 2025, allowing the city to reclaim its position among the world’s top venues for initial public offerings (IPOs). Alongside that recovery, HKIC’s portfolio matured and generated HK$2.3 billion (US$294 million) in investment income last year. HKIC’s move into commercial real estate would mark a notable expansion of its mandate at a time when Hong Kong’s IPO market has attracted strong liquidity, even as the office sector struggles for capital. “The new measures may introduce additional demand into the commercial investment sector and could encourage some investment funds to re‑enter the market,” said Cathie Chung, senior director of research at JLL in Hong Kong. Weak leasing demand and uncertain rental prospects have discouraged major funds from deploying significant capital. For example, Boston-based pan-Asia property manager AEW has not made a new Hong Kong acquisition since 2022, citing difficult market conditions. AEW’s head of Greater China, Athena Tse, welcomed the HKIC initiative as a “positive signal”, noting that domestic capital had begun reallocating into real estate after years of post-pandemic suppression. Still, she cautioned that prices for high-quality grade A assets had remained relatively resilient. “Higher acquisition costs – combined with the capex required for conversion – may compress returns and make large-scale conversion strategies less compelling,” Tse said. More attractive opportunities involved acquiring under-managed assets at distressed levels and repositioning them into living products, she added. “Currently, the market only has limited investors, with most of the potential buyers actively seeking acquisition opportunities in Hong Kong’s commercial investment market being end users,” JLL’s Chung said. Mainland investors with long-term plans in Hong Kong have been snapping up prime offices since last year. These included high-profile transactions by Alibaba Group Holding and fintech affiliate Ant Group, as well as JD.com. Alibaba owns the SCMP. “I would not be surprised if more mainland capital steps up, as a gesture to support the Hong Kong government’s policy,” Ng of Natixis said. ### Related Stocks - [00HSI.HK - Hang Seng Index](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/00HSI.HK.md) - [07200.HK - FL2 CSOP HSI](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/07200.HK.md) - [07300.HK - FI CSOP HSI](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/07300.HK.md) - [07500.HK - FI2 CSOP HSI](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/07500.HK.md) ## Related News & Research | Title | Description | URL | |-------|-------------|-----| | 香港年度财政预算案:2025 年经济增长 3.5%、楼市回暖、股市日均成交额增加九成!预计 2026 年经济增长 2.5% 至 3.5% | 香港特区政府财政司司长陈茂波于 25 日发布 2026/2027 财政预算案,预计 2025 年经济增长 3.5%,楼市回暖,股市日均成交额增加九成,创历史新高。2026 年经济增长预计为 2.5% 至 3.5%。通胀保持轻微,基本通胀率为 | [Link](https://longbridge.com/en/news/276851050.md) | | 香港将在 2026-27 年度的土地出售计划中向开发商提供 9 个住宅用地 | 香港计划在 2026-27 年度土地出售计划中向开发商提供九个住宅用地,旨在提供约 6,650 套公寓。此举是在房地产市场稳定之后,潜在的新公寓供应量达到约 22,580 套,创下八年来的新高。主要地点包括赤柱、洪水桥和东涌,重点关注北部都 | [Link](https://longbridge.com/en/news/277218051.md) | | 纬壹科技城 AI 甘榜两年后竣工 区内建 200 住宅单位 \| 联合早报网 | 政府将在纬壹科技城打造人工智能新园区 “AI 甘榜”,预计 2028 年竣工,提供 200 个住宅单位及办公空间,支持 AI 初创企业和研究人员。新园区由两栋七层楼建筑组成,面积共计 1 万 4500 平方米,能容纳多达 70 家公司。试点 | [Link](https://longbridge.com/en/news/277452361.md) | | TKF Burnside 房地产合作伙伴宣布收购白原市的一处办公物业 | TKF Burnside Real Estate Partners,由 Ric Clark 和 Dennis Friedrich 创立,已在纽约怀特普莱恩斯的汉密尔顿大道 360 号收购了一处 40 万平方英尺的 A 级办公物业。这标志着该 | [Link](https://longbridge.com/en/news/277076961.md) | | 恒指低开 1.22%,恒生科技指数跌 1.78% | 中国石油股份、中国海洋石油涨逾 5%,紫金矿业、中国石油化工涨逾 2%。风险提示及免责条款 市场有风险,投资需谨慎。本文不构成个人投资建议,也未考虑到个别用户特殊的投资目标、财务状况或需要。用户应考虑本文中的任何意见、观点或结论是否符合其特 | [Link](https://longbridge.com/en/news/277384800.md) | --- > **Disclaimer**: This article is for reference only and does not constitute any investment advice.