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Air Profit
20th Mar 2014, 13:20
The Music Just Ended: "Wealthy" Chinese Are Liquidating Offshore Luxury Homes In Scramble For Cash | Zero Hedge (http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-03-19/music-just-ended-wealthy-chinese-are-liquidating-offshore-luxury-homes-scramble-cash)


The Music Just Ended: "Wealthy" Chinese Are Liquidating Offshore Luxury Homes In Scramble For Cash

http://www.zerohedge.com/sites/default/files/pictures/picture-5.jpg (http://www.zerohedge.com/users/tyler-durden)
Submitted by Tyler Durden (http://www.zerohedge.com/users/tyler-durden) on 03/19/2014 23:11 -0400


One of the primary drivers of the real estate bubble in the past several years, particularly in the ultra-luxury segment, were megawealthy Chinese buyers, seeking to park their cash into the safety of offshore real estate where it was deemed inaccessible to mainland regulators and overseers, tracking just where the Chinese record credit bubble would end up. Some, such as us, called it "hot money laundering", and together with foreclosure stuffing and institutional flipping (of rental units and otherwise), we said this was the third leg of the recent US housing bubble. However, while the impact of Chinese buying in the US has been tangible, it has paled in comparison with the epic Chinese buying frenzy in other offshore metropolitan centers like London and Hong Kong. This is understandable: after all as Chuck Prince famously said in 2007, just before the first US mega-bubble burst, "as long as the music is playing, you've got to get up and dance." In China, the music just ended.
http://www.zerohedge.com/sites/default/files/images/user5/imageroot/2014/03/China%20selling%20real%20estate_0.jpg (http://www.zerohedge.com/sites/default/files/images/user5/imageroot/2014/03/China%20selling%20real%20estate.jpg)
But more so than mere analyses which speculate on the true state of the Chinese record credit-fueled economy, such as the one we posted earlier today in which Morgan Stanley noted that China's "Minsky Moment" has finally arrived (http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-03-19/chinas-minsky-moment-here-morgan-stanley-finds), we now can judge them by their actions.
And sure enough, it didn't take long before the debris from China's sharp, sudden attempt to "realign" its runaway credit bubble, including the first ever corporate bond default earlier this month, floated right back to the surface.
Presenting Exhibit A: (http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-03-19/chinas-minsky-moment-here-morgan-stanley-finds)

Cash-strapped Chinese are scrambling to sell their luxury homes in Hong Kong, and some are knocking up to a fifth off the price for a quick sale, as a liquidity crunch looms on the mainland.
Said otherwise, what goes up is now rapidly coming down.

Wealthy Chinese were blamed for pushing up property prices in the former British territory, where they accounted for 43 percent of new luxury home sales in the third quarter of 2012, before a tax hike on foreign buyers was announced.

The rush to sell coincides with a forecast 10 percent drop in property prices this year as the tax increase and rising borrowing costs cool demand. At the same time, credit conditions in China have tightened. Earlier this week, the looming bankruptcy of a Chinese property developer owing 3.5 billion yuan ($565.25 million) heightened concerns that financial risk was spreading.

"Some of the mainland sellers have liquidity issues - say, their companies in China have some difficulties - so they sold the houses to get cash," said Norton Ng, account manager at a Centaline Property real estate office close to the China border, where luxury houses costing up to HK$30 million ($3.9 million) have been popular with mainland buyers.
Alas, as the recent events in China, chronicled in minute detail here have revealed, the "liquidity issues" of the mainland sellers are about to go from bad to much worse. As for Hong Kong, it may have been last said so long ago nobody even remembers the origins of the word but, suddenly, it is now a seller's market:

Property agents said mainland Chinese own close to a third of the existing homes that are now for sale in Hong Kong - up 20 percent from a year ago. Many are offering discounts of 5-10 percent below the market average - and in some cases as much as 20 percent - to make a quick sale, property agents and analysts said.
Also known as a liquidation. And like every game theoretical outcome, he who defects first, or in this case sells, first, sells best. In fact, since panicked selling will only beget more selling, watch as prices suddenly plunge in what was until recently one of the most overvalued property markets in the world. And with prices still at nosebleed levels, not even BlackRock would be able to be a large enough bid to absorb all the slamming offers as suddenly everyone rushes to cash out.
The biggest irony: after creating ghost towns at home, the Chinese "uber wealthy" army is doing so abroad.

In a Hong Kong housing development called Valais, about 10 minutes drive from the Chinese border, real estate agents said that between a quarter and a half of the 330 houses are now on sale. At the development's frenzied debut in 2010, a third of the HK$30-HK$66 million units were sold on the first day, with nearly half going to mainland China buyers.

Dubbed a "ghost town" by local media, the development built by the city's largest developer, Sun Hung Kai Properties Ltd (0016.HK), is one of many estates in Hong Kong where agents are seeing an increasing number of Chinese eager to sell.

"Many mainland buyers bought lots of properties in Hong Kong when the market was red-hot three years ago," said Joseph Tsang, managing director at Jones Lang LaSalle. "But now they want to cash in as liquidity is quite tight in the mainland."
Perhaps our post from yesterday chronicling the crash of the Chinese property developer market (http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-03-18/pboc-denies-it-will-bail-out-collapsed-real-estate-developer-while-chinese-property-)was on to something. And of course, as also described in detail, should China's Zhejiang Xingrun (http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-03-17/second-chinese-corporate-default-real-estate-developer-cny35-billion-debt-collapses)not be bailed out, as the PBOC sternly refuted it would do on Weibo (http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-03-18/pboc-denies-it-will-bail-out-collapsed-real-estate-developer-while-chinese-property-), watch as the intermediary firms themselves shutter all credit, and bring the Chinese property market, both domestic and foreign, to a grinding halt (something he highlighted in our chart of the day (http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-03-19/chinas-housing-problem-one-chart)).
Meanwhile, the selling rush is on.
In a nearby development called The Green - developed by China Overseas Land & Investment (0688.HK) - about one-fifth of the houses delivered at the start of this year are up for sale. More than half of the units, bought for between HK$18 million and HK$60 million, were snapped up by mainland Chinese in 2012.
Because so much changes in just over a year.

"Some banks were chasing them (Chinese landlords) for money, so they need to move some cash back to the mainland," said Ricky Poon, executive director of residential sales at Colliers International. "They're under greater pressure from banks, so they're cutting prices."

In West Kowloon district, an area where mainland Chinese bought up close to a quarter of the apartments in many newly-developed estates, some Chinese landlords are offering discounts on the higher-end, three- to four-bedroom apartments they bought just a few years ago.

This month, a Chinese landlord sold a 1,300 square foot (121 square meter) apartment at the Imperial Cullinan - a high-end estate developed by Sun Hung Kai in 2012 - for HK$19.3 million, 17 percent less than the original price. The landlord told agents to sell the flat "as soon as possible," said Richard Chan, branch manager at Centaline Property in West Kowloon.

In the same area, a 645 square foot, 2-bedroom flat in the Central Park development was sold in just two days after the Chinese owner put it on the market at HK$6.5 million in what agents called the year's best bargain - the cheapest price for a unit of its kind over the past year.
Don't worry there will be many more bargains. Why? Because what was once a buying panic - as recently as months ago - has finally shifted to its logical conclusion. Selling.

"The most important thing for them is to sell as soon as possible," Centaline's Chan said. "In the past two weeks, those who were willing to cut prices were mainland Chinese. It is going to have some impact on the local property market, that's for sure."
Indeed. And once the Hong Kong liquidation frenzy is over, and leaves the city in a state of shock, watch as the great Chinese selling horde stampedes from Los Angeles, to New York, to London, Zurich and Geneva, and leave not a single 50% off sign in its wake.
The good news? All those inaccessibly priced houses that were solely the stratospheric domain of the ultra-high net worth oligarch and criminal jet set, will soon be available to the general public. Especially once the global housing bubble pops, which may have just happened.
Average: 4.833335





Your rating: None Average: 4.8 (36 votes)

Brown Nose
21st Mar 2014, 00:23
Another clown who didn't buy a property trying to talk the market down so he can buy into it!

How about all the government measures in place to stop mainland buyers? If the market starts to fall too fast, they just start removing these measures and then Air Profit might be able to put his housing allowance to good use!

Trafalgar
21st Mar 2014, 04:17
No, the clowns are those who actually think that property is worth $20000 sq/ft ! Read the article, and then realise that the times are changing. Janet Yellen said on Wednesday that interest rates will probably start to rise sooner rather than later. The 'Brown Noses' of the world had their arses handed to them back in 97...and this time it will be worse.

Threethirty
21st Mar 2014, 12:01
Why the on earth would Chinese come to the rescue of a collapsing Hong Kong property market when the reason it's collapsing is the Chinese themselves are exiting the market! One thing with the Chinese once one starts selling they all start selling, just like on the way up when they thought everything in sight had to be purchased for obscene prices, it works both ways, obscene inflation and crazy deflation of prices.
This has been coming for a long, long time. If you haven't seen the writing on the wall then that's a pity, all the signs have been there. China is a disaster zone now but so is the global economy. Its been papered over with money out of thin air but this is coming to an end and so is the lunatic, crazy, greed driven Hong Kong casino property market, about bloody time too!
The difference is the Chinese are less inclined to bail out failed enterprises unlike the muppets at the US Fed, so you could a argue there is more capitalism in China that the US. This in turn will accelerate the Hong Kong property demise.

Klimax
21st Mar 2014, 12:56
It was bound to happen.. What goes up - must come down!

Oasis
21st Mar 2014, 14:51
it's been fun while it lasted. Sell while you still get something for it.

Air Profit
21st Mar 2014, 16:52
A friend purchased for $6.3m in 1997. By 2003 it reached $2.45m. He felt the same way that 'Brown Nose' is feeling.... Be warned. Frankly, I think it's already too late. There is a 'buyers strike' happening in HK already, so all that is left for people to start panicking and cutting their prices precipitously. Once it starts, it's like a snowball rolling downhill.

Ps. Brown Nose....i've owned my 1st place in HK mortgage free for over 10 years now....rented out and paying me nicely thank you. Not selling, so personally not worried about the market. Just don't pretend that the values we see now have any chance of being maintained, they don't. Time will tell...

Brown Nose
21st Mar 2014, 18:54
I,ve bought and sold property in HK, and the money is in the bank. Still hold properties as we'll. If you don't understand that now is vastly different to 1997, then you don't know enough about the property market to make bold statements

Progress Wanchai
21st Mar 2014, 21:21
Tired of being my tenant Air Profit?

After you paid off my mortgage years ago it's probably selfish of me to ask you to keep flying to pay my wanchai tab. But thanks anyway for the thousands of hours and years work for setting me up. Good man.

I think i bought your friends 2.45M property. Hope you weren't financially advising him.
Want to have a guess how many times it's paid itself off?

Thank God for Henny Penny's

Booger
21st Mar 2014, 22:46
I DON'T KNOW WHAT WE'RE YELLING ABOUT!?!

Air Profit
21st Mar 2014, 23:29
...sigh...sometimes I worry about you lot. I posted the article out of interest. As for 'this time it's different'....sure, that's what they always say before the inevitable crash. FYI, I have three properties in HK. It's the absurd CX housing policy that forces me to buy another and rent out the previous that results in the situation I mentioned. Haven't rented in over 20 years in HK. Regardless, the point of the article is to highlight that there are big changes underway in China and around the world. If you REALLY think that property in HK is worth anywhere near the current prices, then good luck to you.

Loopdeloop
21st Mar 2014, 23:43
So you've seen an article by some bloke with a made up name from some esoteric online financial rag which aligns with your thoughts so you thought you'd bring it to our attention. That's great thanks, but did you really have to shout? If you buy a property, its monetary value will likely go both up and down over a period of ownership, but the sky really isn't falling so let's not panic.

Scoreboard
22nd Mar 2014, 00:50
it maybe just one article, but there is more than one article out there....even shows talking about..


hell was watching a BBC news report on the "Golden Visa" that you can get to some Euro countries and the main landers buying it up for the visa get out of jail card that it gives them....


And right there was a Mainlander investor said those exact words...."not happy with what happening in china and best to get ready to roll"


I have bought and sold a few times....and right now smacks of another down cycle...been there seen it, and expecting it shortly

Threethirty
22nd Mar 2014, 08:51
I would hardly call zerohedge esoteric, they were the first to point out the Libor manipulation, fx manipulation, how bullion banks fix Gold prices and besides all this; they have shown how the Chinese economic success story is based on lies and deceit.

mr did
22nd Mar 2014, 15:39
It costs about 2.5 M HKD to build a very nice new village house in Hong Kong, So the normal village houses in the back blocks of Saikung that were recently selling for 25M, values that standard 700sqft block at about 3M USD.

Not much upside on those numbers..

boxjockey
22nd Mar 2014, 21:09
I sold my last place about 6 months ago, and couldn't be happier. Now if I can close on my property overseas soon, I will be sitting waiting for the inevitable. No house is worth 14.5 times average annual earnings. NONE.

box

fly123456
23rd Mar 2014, 07:47
And at what price would you buy back? 90%? 75%? 50%?
A lot of people are waiting for a 20% discount before buying into hk properties. And as soon as people start buying, price will go up again...

I'd say, if the price reduction is gradual, 20% off is possible. More? Only if people start panicking.

Oasis
23rd Mar 2014, 12:58
Where were you in 98-04?
No one wants to buy when the market is tanking. Least of all 'investors'.

Brown Nose
23rd Mar 2014, 14:05
Oasis, I was here, I bought in that period and made 250% on purchase price (or 4800% on initial outlay) I'd call that a good investment!

How did you go?

Tinwacker
23rd Mar 2014, 16:01
It's been most interesting reading the stories in this thread folks....

Luck possibly for me, I bought a wrecked Sai kung house in 2003.

SARS era, after being evicted from a rental that was repossessed by the bank because of the housing collapse at the time. Landlord owned three and suddenly couldn't repay the mortgages.

Wrecked Sai Kung house in 2014 - thank you very very much.......:ok:

TW

Threethirty
23rd Mar 2014, 16:11
Can't see anyone making 250% in this day and age, perhaps 250% the other way! Lot's of people selling means only one thing, the laws of economics haven't just changed overnight because this particular Hong Kong bubble happens to be different. Classic bubble thinking, it will never happen to me!

Brown Nose
23rd Mar 2014, 23:15
Quite right Curtain.

Now is actually the time to buy! I don't have long term confidence in Hong Kong or China, but if you are on a decent CX contract and you don't let the AOA 'negotiate' anything to do with housing, you will do alright before 2040.

I am actively seeking property in HK right now. So cut and paste this and put it in you calendar 5 years from now so I don't have to listen to the inevitable chorus of 'you were lucky'.

I haven't made jack **** out of being a pilot in HK, but property on the other hand, is a good thing as long as you think with your head and have patience. Here is advice from a proper investor, not a whinging pilot that just always seems to miss the boat, buy now and enjoy the $$ in the future.

ETOPS240
24th Mar 2014, 01:50
Actually, Curtain Rod; since the Buyers Stamp Duty 18 months ago, many haven't sold to cash-in.

There have been a fraction of the normal transaction rates. That is one of the indicators of momentum change.

Anyone who thinks there is a significant upside to this current housing climate is deluded.

Brown Nose - best of luck to you.

ETOPS240
24th Mar 2014, 02:17
Indeed, you did. However, it seems that the landscape has changed somewhat in the last two years, whereas you're vehemently claiming that the market has a reasonable upside.

My point is that transactions are at a historical low. In any market, sustained volume crunches are a pre-cursor to a downturn. Factor a large-scale Chinese default in the property sector, combined with a hike in interest rates, and you don't need much imagination to see where it is heading.

Interest rate hikes are a certainty. A collapsing Chinese development sector seems a likelihood.

The former will remove the easy money that fuelled the low-mid range market in the last 4 years. That will trigger an abundance of properties on the market and a shallower correction. The latter will cause a full-on crash across the sector. Both combined will be comedy.

My opinions only. But, I believe that if you bought in the last two years, you're going to be sat in negative equity for an awfully long time.

ETOPS240
24th Mar 2014, 03:01
I do get easily confused, I'll give you that!:}

Brown Nose
24th Mar 2014, 07:07
With all this great knowledge ETOPS you must have made a fortune in the property market! Seeing as I have and I am simply 'deluded'

Put it in your diary and remind me in 5 years that I am deluded.

Property has cycles, The market was too hot a few years ago (I didn't buy then) if this one starts going down too far, that what the government measures are in place for, to stabilize the market.

Trafalgar
24th Mar 2014, 07:34
Brown Nose. In my experience in life, those who boast about 'making a fortune' are invariably the ones who haven't. And even if you have, do you really need to keep going on about it so much? Most of us who have been here for a decade or more have 'made a fortune', we just don't really feel the need to tell anyone about it. I really don't think you have much idea as to how you come across to others.... :hmm:

ETOPS240
24th Mar 2014, 07:47
Quite.

Stay classy, Brown Nose.

Anyone who has put their housing allowance to good use since 2003 has amassed a significant amount of wealth.

By the index, a HUGE amount of that wealth accumulation has been in the last 5 years. It's been a spike. It hasn't taken any skill or significant knowledge. It will come down, and in far less than five years. The differentiator between those with knowledge/savvy/wherewithal and those without will become apparent quite soon.

What I'd ask anyone (though perhaps not to the abhorrently smug) is why take the risk? The market has plateaued, so by not being in the market, you're not losing out. With questionable up-side potential, and enormous downside risk, does it make much sense not to be in cash right now? Time will tell.

PS. If I'd made an actual 'fortune', I wouldn't be here. Those that have, and are still here; well, yes - we all know them!

luvmuhud
24th Mar 2014, 08:14
Brown Nose…would you agree that the HKG housing market is in a bubble? If not, why not? If so, can you find an example of a bubble in any market that has not burst?

So far, all market bubbles I am aware of have eventually burst. If there ARE examples of market bubbles which have slowly declined or plateaued, I am sure they are in the very small minority.

The Aussie housing market is a classic case…driven by supply and demand…YES, but demand for what? NOT demand for 30 years of shelter for your family…sometime in the early to mid 90s, the demand for housing switched to capital gain as a driving factor, and bookshops and primetime TV suddenly were filled with ways to quickly make money out of your family home…something previously unheard of. Like all (or maybe 'almost all') bubbles, it will collapse…and no amount of spruiking or manipulation of the 'fundamentals' from the Prime Minister, Chief Economists or the RBA will arrest the fall. People will just herd out of the market.

lmh

Oasis
25th Mar 2014, 00:48
Brownnose, I wasn't even talking to you. easy tiger.

Threethirty
27th Mar 2014, 11:47
Anyone buying now in Hong Kong obviously loves a good risk as this article below explains.

China's Credit Pipeline Slams Shut: Companies Scramble For The Last Drops Of Liquidity | Zero Hedge (http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-03-26/chinas-credit-pipeline-slams-shut-companies-scramble-last-drops-liquidity)