Confidence Amid Decline
As Hong Kong’s property market endures one of its longest downturns in decades, HSBC CEO Noel Quinn insists the bank’s exposure remains well within manageable limits. Speaking at the bank’s third-quarter earnings call, Quinn said he is “comfortable with the level of risk” tied to the city’s real estate sector, even as prices continue to slide and developers face mounting pressure.
“Our exposure is diversified and largely secured by high-quality assets,” Quinn said. “We’re not seeing distress at a level that would materially impact our balance sheet.”
Hong Kong residential prices have fallen roughly 20% from their 2021 peaks, while office and retail sectors continue to face sluggish leasing activity. Yet HSBC, one of the territory’s largest lenders, maintains a multi-billion-dollar real estate portfolio spanning both corporate and retail clients.
Property Market Weakness Persists
The Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) recently extended mortgage easing measures to stimulate buying activity, but demand has remained subdued amid higher interest rates and a sluggish mainland Chinese economy.
Data from the Rating and Valuation Department shows home prices dropped for the seventh consecutive quarter through Q3 2025, marking the longest losing streak since the 1998 Asian financial crisis.
Despite this, HSBC says its credit quality remains strong. “We have not seen a significant uptick in mortgage delinquencies,” Quinn emphasized. “The vast majority of our retail mortgage book consists of owner-occupiers with stable income profiles.”
Analysts agree that while the property market’s fundamentals remain weak, Hong Kong’s stringent lending standards have prevented a systemic crisis.
“Banks like HSBC have been conservative since 2009,” said Raymond Cheng, head of Hong Kong research at CGS-CIMB. “Even though property prices are falling, the risk of large-scale defaults is low.”
Commercial Real Estate Faces Tougher Headwinds
While residential mortgages remain stable, commercial real estate continues to struggle under pressure from remote work and subdued mainland corporate demand.
Vacancy rates in Hong Kong’s Central business district have climbed to nearly 14%, a record high, while rental yields have dropped below pre-pandemic levels.
HSBC’s exposure to this segment is moderate, according to Quinn, with most loans extended to long-standing corporate clients with robust cash flow. “We stress test our commercial property book regularly,” he said. “We’re confident it can withstand further price adjustments.”
However, he acknowledged that sentiment may take years to recover: “The path to normalization will be gradual. We don’t expect a sharp rebound.”
Strategic Shift Toward Diversification
HSBC has been rebalancing its portfolio toward Southeast Asia and wealth management, reducing reliance on Hong Kong’s property sector while maintaining a strong presence in its home market.
The bank’s Asian wealth business has grown by double digits in 2025, offsetting softer lending income from real estate. HSBC has also expanded in Singapore and India, capitalizing on growing regional wealth and cross-border capital flows.
“Our strategy remains Asia-focused, but diversified,” Quinn said. “Hong Kong will always be a core market, but we’re not over-concentrated in any single sector.”
The approach aligns with HSBC’s broader pivot toward fee-based revenue and digital transformation, designed to stabilize earnings amid cyclical downturns.
Analysts Still Cautious on Recovery Timeline
Most economists expect Hong Kong property prices to decline another 5% to 8% in 2025 before stabilizing in 2026. Rising U.S. Treasury yields and the city’s linked exchange rate system have kept mortgage rates elevated, dampening affordability.
“Recovery depends on interest rate normalization and improved mainland demand,” said Alicia García Herrero, chief Asia-Pacific economist at Natixis. “Until then, sentiment will remain fragile.”
For HSBC, the focus remains on resilience rather than expansion. “We’re not chasing aggressive lending growth in property,” Quinn noted. “Our priority is maintaining asset quality and supporting clients through the cycle.”
The Bottom Line
Even as Hong Kong’s once-booming property market faces its sharpest correction in years, HSBC’s leadership remains calm.
CEO Noel Quinn’s reassurance reflects a broader message to investors: that the bank’s capital strength, risk controls, and diversified exposure are enough to weather the downturn, even if recovery takes time.
“The Hong Kong property market has always been cyclical,” Quinn concluded. “We’ve been through this before, and we’ll come through it again.”





