Is there a housing bubble in Sydney and
Melbourne? Of course there is. The two markets have been distorted for years by
an influx of murky money coming from China, which should be of interest to the
Foreign Investment Review Board. Except that the board is a bureaucratic joke
inside the real estate industry.
It is a joke that has been lost on
would-be first home buyers in particular, who have been watching properties
slide out of reach or requiring a level of debt that their parents and
grandparents never had to carry.
It is no coincidence that during the
past seven years the price of housing has increased by 40 per cent, shrugging
off the Global Financial Crisis, while not a single foreign home-buyer has been
prosecuted by the FIRB, even though thousands of established homes, valued at
tens of billions of dollars, have been purchased illegally.
There is
nothing wrong with a boom market or a globalised property market or closer ties
to China, our biggest trading partner, where most of the buying comes from. But
a bubble market is different.
Over the past 20 years home prices in Australia have almost
trebled while average household income has not kept up. The difference has been
made up with debt. The ratio of household debt to household income is now 150
per cent - a historic high.
The combination of the Chinese economic revolution, which
fed an Australian commodities boom, a gangbuster immigration program, which
added a net one million people over three years at its peak, and a tax regime
which encourages individual superannuation investors to buy investment
properties has produced a long-running property bull market driven by demand.
All straightforward. Not a speculative bubble. But what is
happening now is not straightforward. The 40 per cent increase in Australian
home prices since January 2007 contrasts with a 12 per cent decline in the
United States and almost zero growth in the United Kingdom over the same
period.
Obviously, Australia has a more stable banking system, with
more sturdy governance and little exposure to toxic real estate debt, plus the
protection of the commodities boom driven by China.
But Australia is a smaller market, more susceptible to
impact from the weight of Chinese investment. And commodities companies are now
in a bear market, commodities prices have been declining for months, and the
historic golden phase of the resources investment boom is over. Yet the
property boom rolls on.
Even the governor of the Reserve Bank, Glenn Stevens, has
expressed concerns. The bank's latest Financial Stability Review,
issued last week, is full of discussion of "speculative demand",
"unbalanced" markets and first-home buyers being "priced out of
the market by investors".
The Reserve Bank might want to consider not taking up the
heavy mallet of macro-economic policy, including higher interest rates and
lending restrictions, but instead agitating for the FIRB to finally sending a
signal to the market by prosecuting some people.
Here it is handy to know immigration lawyers whose
practices are based in China and Hong Kong because they rely on the FIRB being
useless when it comes to dubious foreign investments in housing. The federal
government knows it has a problem. It set up a parliamentary committee of
inquiry into housing affordability, headed by Liberal MP Kelly O'Dwyer (who
replaced her mentor the former Treasurer Peter Costello in Parliament). She has
not even waited for the committee to issue its report to put the FIRB on
notice. "There has been a failure of leadership at the FIRB," she
said on September 16.
An inert FIRB appears powerless to inhibit the entire grey
economy that exists to get money out of China and into safe overseas havens, of
which Sydney and Melbourne property are among the most popular. The Chinese
government imposes a limit of US$50,000 ($57,000) a year that can be sent out
of the country. Cashed-up Chinese bypass this via an informal banking system
similar to what has been operating for centuries among overseas Chinese. Money
is shifted through personal relationships rather than transparent bank
transfers.
Also, the Significant Investor Visa set up by the
government is dominated by mainland Chinese who can meet the requirement to
invest $5 million in approved investments within four years. That becomes a
qualification for a permanent visa. Those visas are prized as an express lane
to dual nationality, where an Australian passport becomes an insurance policy
not a new life.
Lower down the chain, another self-contained industry has
taken root for Chinese investors wanting to buy apartments in Sydney and
Melbourne. Entire high-rise buildings are financed, built and sold for the
Chinese market, with non-Chinese buyers rendered irrelevant. Small one-bedroom
apartments are the norm. All this is legal.
Combined, the legal and grey investment from China create a
demand that would otherwise not exist, producing investment for Australia. It
also has a knock-on effect to the housing market. This, coupled with local
superannuation investors, has created valuations that are detached from average
weekly earnings and the demand from would-be owner-occupiers.
Over time, the impact of the Chinese money flow on the
Sydney and Melbourne housing markets, both legal and grey, is measured in tens
of billions of dollars. So, too, is the impact of the new class of
superannuation investors.
It points to the main solutions to the housing
affordability dilemma - avoiding Generation Rent - being political, not
economic.
Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/comment/grey-money-from-china-helps-blow-our-property-bubble-20140928-10n7a8.html#ixzz3EeNT5SvV
Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/comment/grey-money-from-china-helps-blow-our-property-bubble-20140928-10n7a8.html#ixzz3EeNT5SvV
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