Australia is an appealing market particularly after Hong Kong and Singapore
introduced a 15 per cent property tax on non-local buyers and as the local
dollar weakened against other currencies.
The proposed tax in Sydney’s
New South Wales state to be announced this week would be only four per cent, in
Queensland it is three per cent and in Victoria seven per cent.
The island continent
experienced an average 7.25 per cent annual housing growth over the past three
decades according to the central bank, attracting Chinese investment into
commercial and residential real estate.
Chinese invested Aus$4.2
billion in 2011-12, rising to Aus$24.3 billion in 2014-15 according to
Australia’s Foreign Investment Review Board, making them the largest overseas
buyers.
But foreign investment -
including in local firms and agricultural land - is politically sensitive and
last year the national government forced some offshore owners to sell
properties after tightening regulations.
Housing affordability, and
the role of property investors, has also been a key battleground ahead of
national elections on July 2.
But with housing prices
appearing to be coming off the boil and the economy transitioning away from a
mining boom, analysts say the state taxes could backfire.
“It’ll have ramifications
down the track when the market goes through a pretty significant downturn in
terms of construction and developers are finding it hard to get projects
going,” BIS Shrapnel’s managing director Robert Mellor said.
Signs of a softening housing
market could also be why states appear to be trying to “grab some revenue while
it’s on offer”, leading property data provider CoreLogic’s Australia research
head Cameron Kusher said.
Meanwhile, there are
question marks about whether current data adequately captures the full extent
of foreign investment in Australian real estate, with some statistics not
delineating between commercial and residential property purchases.
In one estimate, University
of Sydney researchers last year said offshore Chinese purchases only totalled
two per cent of all transactions in 2014 out of overall residential home sales
of Aus$270 billion, the Sydney Morning Herald reported.
Despite the new tax hurdles,
Kusher expects long-term Chinese housing investment to continue.
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