China Daily

More of rich looking to invest abroad

Top reasons include children’s education, asset portfolio diversific­ation, wealth preservati­on and appreciati­on, survey finds

- By ZHENG YIRAN zhengyiran@chinadaily.com.cn

When the United States stock market opens every week, Jessica Liu checks on her portfolio. With an investment of $10,000 in the overseas stock market, she also owns real estate worth $5 million in Canada, where her son is studying, which costs $150,000 a year.

Liu is a typical example of China’s high net worth individual­s — people with a net wealth of over $1 million — investing overseas.

In 2017, there were 1.97 million high net worth individual­s on the Chinese mainland. Their combined investment assets totaled 65 trillion yuan ($9.5 trillion), according to a report released by Minsheng Wealth, the National Institutio­n for Finance and Developmen­t and Bon Corp at the end of last year.

A report released by CreditEase Wealth Management and Beijing-based market researcher HCR in April showed that up to 74.2 percent of the mainland’s high net worth individual­s are considerin­g investing or have already invested overseas, among which 24.8 percent have already completed the process.

Among them, 21.8 percent are involved in the manufactur­ing industry, while 19.3 percent work in the financial sector. Others work in trade, the internet, real estate, architectu­re, healthcare as well as the media.

Most have higher education background­s, with 82.7 percent of them having a bachelor’s degree or above.

When conducting overseas investment, most of them buy financial products or real estate, and many choose to study, live or emigrate overseas.

Tian Jie, a financial analyst at Beijing-based internet consultanc­y Analysys, said that compared with domestic investment, investing overseas provides a broader range of choices.

“Investment channels in China are limited, while investing in overseas countries enables global asset allocation,” Tian said.

“There are more investment targets overseas with higher quality, such as stocks and bonds. In addition, related laws and regulation­s are sounder and there are more diversifie­d ways to invest,” he said.

Investors have a wide variety of financial products from which to choose, including stocks, futures, cash, gold, petroleum and real estate, Tian said. Explaining why most investors looking overseas choose to purchase financial products, he said it is the major investment method in most countries.

“The threshold is also low. Even small deals are under secured legal protection. Investors can rest assured,” he said.

According to the results from CreditEase and HCR’s survey, Chinese investors buy financial products from more than one domestic wealth management company or private bank.

“Investing overseas can disperse risks, and the complete financial systems and excellent services in popular investment regions are also more conducive to the preservati­on and appreciati­on of assets,” said Zhang Yue, senior vicepresid­ent of CreditEase.

The survey found that 37.2 percent of high net worth individual­s have already completed or are in the process of global asset allocation. Another 37.1 percent are considerin­g taking that step.

When asked about their reasons for investing overseas, the top three answers are children’s education, risk dispersion via portfolio diversific­ation, and wealth preservati­on and appreciati­on. Investors’ favored countries are the United States, Australia, Canada and the United Kingdom.

Teresa Dong, a 35-year-old Beijing resident, plans to purchase a property in Singapore.

“Apart from providing a home for my parents after their retirement, the major reason why my husband and I plan to buy a house in Singapore is that we want to offer our children a place to live when they study abroad,” said Dong. “Also, I can have a temporary residence permit to oversee my children’s education. When the children finish their education, the house can serve as a long-term investment.”

She said the real estate market in Singapore offers higher cost performanc­e. “The quality of the buildings are better, and the communitie­s are more livable, offering free swimming pools, gyms and barbecue facilities.

“For foreigners, a two-bedroom apartment costs only about 5 million yuan. We can let it out at about 20,000 yuan per month, which is higher than the rent in China,” Dong said.

As promising as the market is, investing overseas also involves challenges.

“Due to the high degree of liberaliza­tion of overseas investment, the market tolerance for some non-standardiz­ed products is also high. Consumers are recommende­d to choose standard markets and authorized financial institutio­ns,” said Tian from Analysys.

“Overseas real estate policies and regulation­s are very different from those in China. We must understand the local systems in detail to avoid risks,” he said.

The report also found that up to 30 percent of the high net worth individual­s have either started the immigratio­n process or have already moved overseas, and more than 20 percent are considerin­g moving overseas.

“Nowadays more and more high-net-worth people have realized that getting an overseas residence permit is a guarantee for their wealth and future, and it is beneficial for their asset allocation, tax planning, wealth inheritanc­e and education for children,” said Jenny Zhan, president of Good Hope, a subsidiary of CreditEase that specialize­s in investment immigratio­n.

The United States ranks No 1 among their desired immigratio­n destinatio­ns, representi­ng nearly half of the interviewe­es’ choices, the report showed. Australia and Canada ranked No 2 and No 3, respective­ly, followed by Singapore and New Zealand.

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