logo
Elevated rents a ‘big problem' for Hong Kong restaurants as closures mount

Elevated rents a ‘big problem' for Hong Kong restaurants as closures mount

Hong Kong's restaurant industry is bracing for the wave of business closures to continue into the second half of the year with little hope for a quick turnaround, following a string of shutdowns of well-established chains in the city.
'We are worried about the overall situation in the second half of the year,' Simon Wong Ka-wo, president of the Hong Kong Federation of Restaurants and Related Trades, told a radio show on Saturday.
Wong cited rent as a 'rather big problem', with industry observers saying that prices remained elevated. However, some landlords had recently reduced rents, and in certain areas, prices dropped by up to 15 per cent over the past six months, he added.
'However, when calculated by cost compared with the Greater Bay Area, especially Shenzhen, our costs are still higher,' he said.
'So, in terms of labour, rent, ingredients, other administrative expenses and promotion, it is precisely the cost-effectiveness that puts immense pressure on operating a restaurant in Hong Kong.'
Bakery chain Taipan Bread & Cakes, the inventor of 'snow skin' mooncakes, closed down all of its branches earlier this week after more than four decades in the business, becoming the latest in the list of major chains that have shut down in recent years.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hong Kong CEOs get crash course in AI to pass on skills to 5,000 students
Hong Kong CEOs get crash course in AI to pass on skills to 5,000 students

South China Morning Post

time35 minutes ago

  • South China Morning Post

Hong Kong CEOs get crash course in AI to pass on skills to 5,000 students

More than a dozen CEOs and top-level executives in Hong Kong are taking a crash course in AI with the help of a non-profit to equip them with the skills to help 5,000 secondary school students learn the essentials of the technology. The CEO training on Sunday was a key component of the AI-5000 Initiative, a collaborative effort between Project Melo and Preface, a Hong Kong-based education technology company. The project garnered support from 17 top-level executives and leaders, including M+ museum chairman Bernard Chan, Link Reit CEO George Hongchoy, and Randy Lai, the CEO of McDonald's Hong Kong. 'We believe that Hong Kong secondary students absolutely have to focus on AI,' said Kenny Lam Kwok-fung, a co-founder of Project Melo, a local non-profit focused on empowering young people that is co-running the programme. Being held between September this year and March 2026, more than 50 schools are taking part in the programme. The courses will be delivered by Preface staff, students from Project Melo and the 15 participating CEOs. The training programme is being launched amid a wider push by the government to get young people interested in the technology.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store