
Chinese e-commerce giant offers highest bid to acquire prime Central office block as seller seeks liquidity ahead of bond maturities
has submitted the highest offer for a 50 percent stake in — a 27-storey Grade-A office building in Hong Kong’s Central business district — currently owned in equal parts by and .
Reports say the bid surpasses rival offers, though exact financial terms have not been publicly disclosed.
:contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}
The proposed transaction is part of Lai Sun’s broader strategy to dispose of up to HK$8 billion in assets over two years, aimed at easing mounting debt pressures and avoiding refinancing risks associated with a US dollar-denominated bond maturing in mid-2026. :contentReference[oaicite:5]{index=5} The sale would also transfer a trophy-class Hong Kong property from a leveraged developer into the hands of a major mainland tech investor at a time when interest in prime Central real estate remains selective.
CCB Tower sits on a historically significant site — once home to the former Hilton (later Regal) hotel — and comprises some 229,000 square feet of gross floor area.
China Construction Bank (Asia) occupies most of the building, including its banking hall and 18 floors of office space.
:contentReference[oaicite:6]{index=6}
Although JD.com declined to comment publicly on the bid, market observers interpret the move as a strategic attempt to anchor its regional presence in Hong Kong’s financial core.
They argue that ownership of a flagship office asset could provide JD.com with a “mainland-to-international” gateway — useful for regional corporate and regulatory engagement even as it expands its logistics, supply-chain and enterprise services.
:contentReference[oaicite:7]{index=7}
For Hong Kong’s commercial real estate market — still recovering from a downturn marked by elevated vacancy and falling rents — a successful deal would signal renewed interest from mainland investors in trophy-grade assets.
For Lai Sun, the sale could relieve pressure on its balance sheet and support refinancing efforts.
For JD.com, it represents a bet on long-term strategic value beyond short-term returns.
As bidding reportedly continues, the coming days will reveal whether the transaction closes and under what terms, potentially reshaping ownership of one of Central’s iconic office buildings and offering new insights into cross-border capital flows in Greater China’s corporate real-estate market.
Reports say the bid surpasses rival offers, though exact financial terms have not been publicly disclosed.
:contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}
The proposed transaction is part of Lai Sun’s broader strategy to dispose of up to HK$8 billion in assets over two years, aimed at easing mounting debt pressures and avoiding refinancing risks associated with a US dollar-denominated bond maturing in mid-2026. :contentReference[oaicite:5]{index=5} The sale would also transfer a trophy-class Hong Kong property from a leveraged developer into the hands of a major mainland tech investor at a time when interest in prime Central real estate remains selective.
CCB Tower sits on a historically significant site — once home to the former Hilton (later Regal) hotel — and comprises some 229,000 square feet of gross floor area.
China Construction Bank (Asia) occupies most of the building, including its banking hall and 18 floors of office space.
:contentReference[oaicite:6]{index=6}
Although JD.com declined to comment publicly on the bid, market observers interpret the move as a strategic attempt to anchor its regional presence in Hong Kong’s financial core.
They argue that ownership of a flagship office asset could provide JD.com with a “mainland-to-international” gateway — useful for regional corporate and regulatory engagement even as it expands its logistics, supply-chain and enterprise services.
:contentReference[oaicite:7]{index=7}
For Hong Kong’s commercial real estate market — still recovering from a downturn marked by elevated vacancy and falling rents — a successful deal would signal renewed interest from mainland investors in trophy-grade assets.
For Lai Sun, the sale could relieve pressure on its balance sheet and support refinancing efforts.
For JD.com, it represents a bet on long-term strategic value beyond short-term returns.
As bidding reportedly continues, the coming days will reveal whether the transaction closes and under what terms, potentially reshaping ownership of one of Central’s iconic office buildings and offering new insights into cross-border capital flows in Greater China’s corporate real-estate market.









































