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						 HSBC 
						curbs mortgage offering to Chinese citizens in U.S. 
						
		 
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		[January 28, 2016] 
		By Elizabeth Dilts and Julie Gordon 
						
		NEW YORK/ VANCOUVER (Reuters) - Europe's 
		biggest lender HSBC will no longer provide mortgages to some Chinese 
		nationals who buy real estate in the United States, a policy change that 
		comes as Beijing is battling to stem a swelling crowd of citizens trying 
		to get money out of China. 
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			 An HSBC spokesman in New York told Reuters on Wednesday that the new 
			policy went into effect last week, roughly a month after China 
			suspended Standard Chartered and DBS Group Holdings Ltd from 
			conducting some foreign exchange business and as authorities try to 
			limit capital outflows. 
			 
			China's stock market slump, slowing economic growth and weak real 
			estate prices have encouraged Chinese individuals and companies to 
			try to shift money offshore for higher returns, a headache for 
			Beijing as the capital outflows undermine efforts to prop up the 
			yuan and domestic investment. 
			 
			Realtors of luxury property in cities like New York, Los Angeles, 
			and Vancouver, said more than 80 percent of wealthy Chinese buyers 
			have ties to China. 
			 
			In the United States, real estate agents and regulators say Chinese 
			buyers often prefer to buy property in cash and they are the biggest 
			foreign buyer. 
			
			  
			Data from the country's National Association of Realtors shows they 
			bought $28.6 billion of property in 2015, up from $22 billion in 
			2014. 
			 
			HSBC declined to clarify which clients would be affected by the 
			change beyond describing the policy as impacting some Chinese 
			nationals. 
			 
			Luxury homes news website Mansion Global, which first reported the 
			HSBC policy change, said it would affect Chinese nationals holding 
			temporary visitor 'B' visas if the majority of their income and 
			assets are maintained in China. 
			 
			In Vancouver, an HSBC spokeswoman said HSBC's Canadian arm already 
			had similar policies in place and was actively reviewing those 
			policies in the context of the local regulatory environment to 
			determine if and what changes are necessary. 
			 
			She added that the bank has a very conservative risk appetite and 
			favors customers with strong ties to Canada, or who are building 
			strong ties to Canada. 
			 
			
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			China's State Administration of Foreign Exchange said late last year 
			it would soon launch a system to monitor foreign exchange businesses 
			at banks and put people who tried to buy more foreign currency than 
			is allowed on a watch list. 
			Those found trying to purchase more than the maximum $50,000 in 
			foreign currency a year would be placed on a watch list, it said. 
			 
			"HSBC fully complies with all applicable regulations in the markets 
			in which it operates and constantly reviews its policies to protect 
			its customers and support the orderly and transparent operation of 
			financial markets," a statement from the London-based bank said. 
			 
			HSBC's pivot away from lending to some Chinese nationals abroad 
			comes as other international banks clamor to lend more to wealthy 
			Chinese. 
			 
			The Royal Bank of Canada <RY.TO> scrapped its C$1.25 million cap on 
			mortgages to borrowers with no local credit history last year in a 
			bid to tap into surging demand for financing from wealthy immigrant 
			buyers. 
			 
			A spokeswoman representing RBC in Hong Kong was not immediately able 
			to comment on the bank's Canadian business. 
			 
			(Additional reporting by Lawrence White, Editing by Lisa Jucca and 
			Neil Fullick) 
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