SINGAPORE/HONG KONG — Hong Kong鈥檚 property stocks are cheaper than Singapore鈥檚, although not cheap enough to account for the risk that the world鈥檚 least affordable city could have a housing crash.

Singapore home sales fall 21% in June as fewer projects launched
A river taxi boat ply along the river next to the financial district in Singapore on June 29. — AFP

That鈥檚 according to analysts and money managers from Nomura Holdings, Inc. to Janus Henderson Group Plc. In Singapore, some are seeing signs of a market bottom after years of home price declines. Hong Kong, where any letup in government cooling measures looks unlikely in the short term, may be teetering on the edge of a slump, with Morgan Stanley among those seeing a risk of multiyear declines.

The upshot: while Hong Kong developers鈥 shares are cheaper across a range of measures, their Singapore peers look more attractive.

鈥淭he consensus is that Hong Kong鈥檚 housing prices may have more downside risk than upside,鈥 said Joyce Kwock, an analyst at Nomura Holdings.

One valuation gauge shows that Hong Kong developers are trading at larger discounts to net asset value than peers in Singapore, with shares of Henderson Land Development Co. at about a 54% discount compared with City Developments Ltd.鈥檚 20%, according to Bloomberg calculations based on data from Nomura.

A price-to-book comparison also shows Hong Kong property companies at lower valuations than their Singapore peers.

But the Singaporean market — especially the residential part — 鈥渓ooks like it鈥檚 at the start of a multi-year upside cycle,鈥 said Xin Yan Low, a property securities analyst at Janus Henderson Investors. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 think it looks expensive as of now.鈥

Singaporean real estate owners and developers have outperformed this year, gaining 33% in their first rally after four years of declines, compared to a 24% increase for Hong Kong peers, based on Bloomberg Intelligence indexes.

Developer CapitaLand Ltd. said that property investors see Singapore as more attractive than Hong Kong, London or cities in Australia. CapitaLand and City Developments both say that Singapore鈥檚 residential market may be 鈥渂ottoming out.鈥 Hong Kong home prices have shot ever higher, bouncing back from the global financial crisis and periodic bouts of government cooling, while Singapore residential prices have declined 12% from a peak, dropping for 15 straight quarters.

A 70% divergence in home prices in Singapore and Hong Kong over the past six years is due for a reversal, according to Morgan Stanley. Singapore developers score better in terms of affordability for buyers, a tight home supply, and a potential easing of policy measures, the bank said in a note.

The bank鈥檚 analysts forecast Singapore residential property prices to rise 5% in 2018. In contrast, Hong Kong鈥檚 multiyear price decline could start with a drop of 5% this year. — Bloomberg