By John Burns
Real Estate Consulting

Betting on Chinese homebuyers in the U.S.

John Burns

Chinese homebuyers comprise roughly 2% of U.S. housing demand—and far more than that in the gateway metro areas with excellent airport access.

According to the National Association of Realtors, 16% of international homebuyers come from China and spent $29 billion last year, surpassing Canada, which has fallen from 24% of foreign activity to 13%.

CNBC reported that 39% of foreign buyers in Manhattan are Chinese, up from 12% last year. Passenger travel to the U.S. from Beijing has increased 141% in the last five years and has increased 127% from Shanghai.

Of the eight currencies we track for foreign buying activity, the Chinese currency is the only one that has held up against the dollar in the last year, and that just began changing last week.

The Chinese economy has grown more than 800% in 14 years, clearly creating many millionaires along the way.

Chinese homebuyers in the U.S.

I live and work in Irvine, California, which many consider to be ground zero for Chinese new home investment in the United States.

In addition to everything else great about living in America, Irvine has fantastic schools, many new homes (the Chinese have a huge preference for new over resale), a very well established Chinese culture and is within one hour of Los Angeles International Airport.

Some of the new home communities we have worked on in Irvine have sold more than half of their homes to Chinese buyers, and I am being conservative here. Prices often exceed $1 million, and frequently there is no mortgage. CNBC recently featured Irvine in its story on Chinese homebuyers.

Since 2006, when I had lunch with Peter Navarro, the bearish author of “The Coming China Wars” and “Death by China,” I have been carefully watching the impact of Chinese buyers on the U.S. housing market, and specifically in Irvine.

We have written two white papers on the topic, interviewed countless numbers of sales agents, hosted an intern whose family had just migrated here and bought a home in Irvine, and are now partnering with real estate brokerage Pacific Union in San Francisco on a research project to learn more. To give you an idea of the Chinese interest in California housing, we presented at Pacific Union’s annual housing outlook conference last year, which was broadcast live at three venues in China.

Chinese interest in U.S. housing is not confined to California, as our consulting team has noticed Chinese homebuying in areas served by all of the major airport hubs. In South Florida, agents have been flying directly to China to compensate for declining demand from South America.

While the recent Chinese stock market correction has caused a decline in sales—one of my builder-clients has noticed a sharp pullback, another just told me about a home sale cancellation specifically due to the buyer’s stock market losses, and one publicly traded homebuilder even mentioned the pullback on its earnings call—our research has convinced us of tremendous Chinese demand to buy U.S. real estate for their families and as investments.

Nonetheless, we remain very uncertain about the level of future Chinese homebuying

  • Is the number of people who can no longer afford to purchase a home after the stock market correction and currency devaluation greater or less than the number of people who will be encouraged to buy here by the stock market and currency instability?
  • How real is the economic growth, and is there underlying debt (as reported by the Wall Street Journal in December) that could cause Chinese wealth to unravel?
  • Will the government lift the $50,000 annual overseas investment cap later this year as anticipated, which could cause a flood of Chinese investment in U.S. housing?

Future uncertain for Chinese homebuying in the U.S.

We don’t know the answer to any of these questions, but the future success of many new home communities depends on the answer. If you have some particular insight based on your knowledge of China, please let us know. We are constantly in search of new and better information.

John Burns
CEO
If you have any questions, please call 949-870-1210 or email for more information.
Learn more about our research and consulting services.




Click here to subscribe to our weekly email newsletter




Categories | Article | Market & Trends
Tags |
  • Editorial Staff

    We believe in the positive, life-changing impact of real estate investing. Our mission is to help investors achieve their goals to build wealth, better manage time, and live a life full of purpose.

Related Posts

0 Comments

Submit a Comment