From the New York website: Chinese institutional investors, facing
highly leveraged markets at home, are shifting their focus from the volatile
luxury sector to the more stable middle market in the U.S.
Lower
priced residential properties and rentals, student housing, senior-living
centers and skilled nursing homes are all becoming more attractive to Chinese
investors, the Wall Street Journal reported. In recent years, Chinese investors
have taken on high-risk luxury developments in Manhattan. The U.S. arm of
Shanghai Municipal Investment, for example, has made significant investments in
the city in past year.
It
partnered with Ceruzzi Properties to buy a development site at 520 Fifth Avenue,
and also bought a $300 million equity
stake in Gary
Barnett’s Central Park Tower development.
Chinese
development giant China Vanke has also poured money into the city’s residential
market. It has partnered with Slate Property Group and
Adam America Real Estate on three development deals, including the
controversial Rivington House condominium conversion. It also holds a stake in
RFR Realty’s condo tower at 100 East 53rd Street.
But,
according to the Journal, Chinese buyers are now thinking more strategically
about the U.S. market, and that means shying away from the high-end property
market.
Out of
Vanke’s 14 U.S. projects, 10 are focused on the middle-tier condominium market,
some of which have rental units. The firm said it prefers to focus on
developing homes for consumers whose demand is “necessity driven.”
“These
simple and enduring principles have helped us focus away from the luxury market
and investor-centric projects that carry higher potential risk,” Kai-yan Lee,
managing director of Vanke Holdings USA, told the newspaper.
The
company lost $10 billion in
market value this
month, as investors sold off shares amid fears that government intervention
could complicate the company’s takeover.
China
is set to introduce new
rules to curb
capital flight. The State Council of the People’s Republic of China is expected
to announce stricter controls over foreign investments exceeding $10 billion,
and more than $1 billion for state-owned firms. [WSJ] — Miriam Hall
Original Content The Real Deal

No comments:
Post a Comment