Seeking a bargain, and taste of the good life, Chinese
buy Greek homes
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[October 29, 2018]
By Angeliki Koutantou
ATHENS (Reuters) - Three times a week,
hundreds of Chinese investors arrive at Athens airport to be greeted by
Greek real estate agents who drive them straight into the city to view
apartments for sale.
The visitors are drawn to Greece by rock-bottom property prices and one
of Europe's most generous "golden visa" schemes, offering a renewable
five-year resident's permit in return for a 250,000 euro
($285,000)investment in real estate.
That's enough to buy a three-bedroom apartment in the capital with a
view to the Acropolis hill.
It is also enough to bring the first glimmers of recovery to the market
since the Greek economy started to collapse after the debt crisis in
2009, although prices are still down by about 40 percent from their
peak.
One Athens resident, who gave his name only as Vassilis, had almost
given up finding a buyer for his home last year when a minivan pulled up
outside his maisonette and a Chinese family of four got out. A day
later, he got an offer.
"They didn’t see the house again. We went and got a down-payment, and
everything was set in motion," he said.
Vassilis had bought the home in the up-and-coming suburb of Gerakas for
320,000 euros ($367,000) in 2007 and decided to sell in order to buy his
two adult children their own apartments. He sold it to the Chinese
family for 220,000 euros.
Real estate prices rose 0.8 percent in the second quarter year-on-year
after a 0.1 percent rise in the first – the first pick-up since 2008,
according to Bank of Greece data.
Foreign direct investment in property jumped 91 percent to 287 million
euros last year from 2016, the bank's data showed. Meanwhile, taxes from
property sales rose by an annual 41 percent in the seven months to July
to 204.7 million euros, according to data from state revenue authority
AADE.
"We are getting much more phone calls," said Lefteris Potamianos, head
of the Real Estate Association of Athens, which represents about 3,000
brokers.
"The overwhelming majority is foreigners and there are yet some Greeks.
Certainly, Chinese are by far ahead of the game."
Potamianos predicted house prices would rise an average 5-7 percent
annually in the greater Athens area this year and the next.
THE FLIP SIDE
It helps that the yuan has fallen more than 6 percent against the dollar
this year. Beijing restricts overseas investment but Chinese investors
are still finding ways to get money out of the country.
People like Lian Wenmin, 29, a former accountant from Beijing and
potential golden-visa investor, say buying in Greece is not just about
taking advantage of low prices and getting a visa that allows them to
travel freely within the European Union.
Greece's warm climate is also part of the appeal, Lian says.
"Greece has very nice weather and I like the people, the food," she told
Reuters on the balcony of an apartment she is thinking of buying in an
upmarket area overlooking central Athens.
[to top of second column] |
A real estate agent shows to Lian Wenmin, 29, potential buyer from
China an apartment in central Athens, Greece, May 25, 2018.Reuters/Costas
Baltas
Lian plans to spend 250,000 euros on one or two apartments in central Athens to
rent out on a home-sharing site such as Airbnb, and possibly on another property
for herself in a southern suburb.
"I can buy like two or three apartments with 250,000 but if I spend the same
amount of money in Beijing I can only buy one apartment in a generally nice
location of 30 square meters. It's big difference," she said.
Tighter restrictions on migration starting last year in the United States,
Canada and Australia - popular destinations for Chinese in the past - have also
worked in Greece's favor, said Alice Ma, sales manager at Beijing-based Bloom
Consulting.
Portugal's five-year golden-visa program has also attracted Chinese interest
along with investors from France and Britain, but there buyers need to put in at
least 500,000 euros.
Ioannis Anastassiadis's Anastassiadis Group offers a wide range of services to
facilitate Chinese investment, including providing lawyers and notaries to help
secure the visa.
"Greece is slowly becoming a place which attracts people to live here and to
plan even the rest of their lives in Greece," he said.
For renters, the Chinese-led interest is not good news, however.
The buy-to-rent mentality of many of the buyers is pushing up rents and
sometimes leading to threats of eviction unless renters agree to pay the higher
prices, said Angelos Skiadas, head of Greece's tenants association PASYPE.
Rents across Greece rose by 8.4 percent in the 12 months to September from a
year earlier, according to a survey by the Greek franchise of RE/MAX
International.
"Since last year, the problem is becoming a nightmare," Skiadas said. "Τenants
are forced to leave because they are being blackmailed by their landlords, while
those who look for a new house are faced with extravagant rents."
He said PASYPE plans to lobby the government to raise the minimum rental period
from three to six years.
Of the 3,404 residency permits issued since the golden visa program started in
2013, almost 1,700 have gone to Chinese nationals, data from investment agency
Enterprise Greece showed.
Carrie Law, chief executive of Juwai.com, a Chinese website for global real
estate, said inquiries about Greece doubled in the first quarter of 2018 and
jumped three-fold in the second.
"It is a dramatic growth," she said.
($1 = 0.8783 euros)
(Additional reporting by Clare Jim in Hong Kong, John Ruwitch in Shanghai and
Axel Bugge in Lisbon, Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)
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