Research Paper Undergraduate 383 words

Wall Street Journal Cheng, Jonathan.

Last reviewed: April 11, 2008 ~2 min read

¶ … Wall Street Journal

Cheng, Jonathan. (11 Apr 2008). "Macau: A Risky bet; property popular, for now."

International Finance the Wall Street Journal. pg.

Could Macau be the next example of a real estate bubble? Although the international economy looks grim in many sectors, one area is continuing to do well -- that of the gaming industry. According to the Wall Street Journal, in a small Chinese town west of Hong Kong known as Macau, the economy is booming because of the casino "bonanza" in the area (Cheng 2008: C5). As a result, demand for housing is skyrocketing. The limited supply of housing, and very low mortgage rates in the local residential market have made housing prices soar. The spike in demand for residential housing is largely due to the needs of casino workers and other individuals who have moved their businesses to the newly expanding economy in the region.

But, Jonathan Cheng cautions, "investors looking at an equity play on Macau's property sector need to look at the whole picture" (Cheng 2008: C5). Supply is increasing in cheaper nearby areas already, much to the dismay of Hong Kong- listed companies receiving most of their income from Macau property development. Also, the slower GDP growth in the Chinese mainland may mean fewer visitors willing to gamble.

But although the housing demand may cool, the expansion of the Macau economy does not seem like a parallel to the U.S. housing bubble. First of all, the presence of gambling means that housing will likely always be at a premium in the region, as it is the only place where the Chinese government allows gambling. There will always be a demand for workers to staff the venues that allow people to gamble, eat, sleep, and be entertained. Although an international recession will have an impact upon the Macau economy, certain economic sectors seem better equipped to weather an economic downturn -- and sadly, a poorer economy could even mean a rise in gambling, and draw even individuals to the area looking for work (or a quick profit) at the gaming houses. Additionally, the population growth overall in the region is continuing to rise, and unless interest rates become prohibitively high, and cause a spike in mortgage prices this region could provide potential windfalls to international real estate investors and capitalists.

You’re 100% through this paper. Sign up to read the full paper.

Sign Up Now — Instant Access Already a member? Log in
130,000+ paper examples AI writing assistant Citation generator Cancel anytime
Cite This Paper
PaperDue. (2008). Wall Street Journal Cheng, Jonathan.. PaperDue. https://www.paperdue.com/essay/wall-street-journal-cheng-jonathan-30799

Always verify citation format against your institution’s current style guide requirements.