Chinese U.S. homebuying to hit eight-year low, says leading property
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[September 23, 2019] By
Dominic Roshan KL and Ankit Ajmera
(Reuters) - U.S. home sales to Chinese
buyers are likely to drop to an eight-year low in the year ending next
March as a prolonged Sino-U.S. trade war hits demand, according to
estimates from Chinese real estate website Juwai.com.
Analogous to U.S. portals like Realtor.com and Trulia, Juwai is China's
largest international property website, hosting some 2.8 million
listings on both sides of China's internet censorship mechanism known as
the Great Firewall.
Based on its enquiry and buyer data, as well as feedback from industry
partners, the site estimated U.S. home sales to Chinese buyers would
fall to between $10 billion and $12 billion in the year to March 2020.
While that represents just a fraction of 1% of the $1.6 trillion worth
of U.S. homes sold annually, it is down from the $13.4 billion reported
for the year ended in March by the National Association of Realtors (NAR)
and from more than $30 billion in both 2017 and 2018.
The site's executive chairman, Malaysian-based German tech entrepreneur
Georg Chmiel, said worries over U.S. visas, the weakening yuan <CNY=>
and the desire to diversify investments had spurred a collapse in sales
to Chinese buyers after a five-year surge.
"The Trump administration's tariffs, aggressive rhetoric, targeting of
Chinese graduate students at U.S. universities, and new visa red tape
have all hurt Chinese demand," he told Reuters.
For interactive chart on chinese homebuying in the U.S. losing steam png,
click here:
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/editorcharts/USA-HOMESALES-CHINA/0H001QX7Y8HS/index.html
After a decade of gains against the dollar, China's yuan currency <CNY=>
has fallen 11% in the past 18 months, capped by a devaluation in August
which was widely seen as a political move in the trade war and which
added to buyers' concerns.
Chmiel said for Chinese customers U.S. properties served as both
financial investments and potential homes for them or for offspring, who
they hoped one day would study and work in the United States.
"With the trade war going on, it's easy to imagine a scenario in which
you might be forced to sell or your investment might otherwise lose
value," he said.
For interactive chart on top 5 foreign U.S. homebuyers by country, click
here:
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/editorcharts/USA-HOMESALES-CHINA/0H001QX8D8K3/index.html
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CALIFORNIA FADING
The trend has shown up at U.S. housebuilders this year, with luxury homebuilder
Toll Brothers Inc <TOL.N> flagging sluggish sales in California, which makes up
as much as 30% of its business and is the main target market for Chinese buyers.
The country's number two builder, Lennar Corp <LEN.N> also recently put the
blame for soft sales in the state and a western region which accounts for 42% of
sales, on fading Chinese demand.
Gay Cororaton, a senior economist at the NAR, did not provide detailed
forecasts, but said a slowing Chinese economy and the dollar's strength were
likely to keep pushing down Chinese buying, particularly in prime markets such
as California.
"Chinese buyers form a significant portion of international home sales in
California, where home prices have been increasing steadily, and that has been
one of the factors acting as a deterrent for home purchases, when the yuan has
declined," she said.
"They might look for properties in areas that are less expensive than
California, such as Texas and Seattle. And this could put downward pressure on
prices in California," Cororaton said.
Dean Jones, principal and owner at Seattle-based brokerage Realogics Sotheby's
International Realty, said the focus was shifting to "secondary gateway markets"
such as Seattle, because of their strong economies and relative affordability.
Jones said Seattle was wooing international buyers with properties selling for a
third or half the price of real estate in San Francisco or Los Angeles.
One 41-year old businessman from Tianjin in China, who is looking for properties
with a U.S. broker and asked not to be named, told Reuters he hoped the trade
war would be resolved soon and that he was considering waiting it out before
buying.
"The United States is a livable country where the natural environment, climate,
education, medical care, commodity prices are all satisfying," he said.
"(But) if the trade war keeps intense, it may affect my income and I will
probably reduce (my investment)."
(Reporting by Dominic Roshan K.L. and Ankit Ajmera in Bengaluru, additional
reporting by Shanghai Newsroom; Editing by Patrick Graham and Tomasz Janowski)
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