Business World

Rich Chinese race to fund Kushner Tower, Palm Springs, other luxe projects

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AS MEMBERS of Congress in Washington debate raising the minimum required to obtain a US immigrant investor visa from $500,000 to $1.35 million, concern about the hike has set off a scramble among wealthy would-be participan­ts in China.

“Some clients are demanding that we make sure their applicatio­ns are submitted before April 28,” the date the program expires unless extended or amended by Congress, said Judy Gao, director of the US program at Can-Reach (Pacific), a Beijing-based agency that facilitate­s so-called EB-5 Immigrant Investor visas. “We’re working overtime to do that.”

China’s wealthy, using not- always- legal means to skirt capital controls to get their money out and at the same time gain residency in the US, are continuing to dwarf all others as the largest participan­ts in the EB- 5 program, despite heightened measures by the Chinese government.

The initiative channels money to highprofil­e US real estate projects from New York to Miami to California — including those by the family of Jared Kushner, President Donald Trump’s son-in-law and senior adviser. A current plan by the Kushner family to refinance and reconstruc­t its New York office building at 666 Fifth Avenue is seeking $850 million in EB-5 funding, as well as cash from Anbang Insurance Group and other investors, according to terms of the proposal reported by Bloomberg News. A spokesman for Kushner Companies declined to comment.

200,000 JOBS

At stake if the EB- 5 is curtailed is a program estimated to have played a role in creating at least 200,000 US jobs and drawing as much as $14 billion from Chinese investors alone, based on data provided by Rosen Consulting Group and the Asia Society. Past projects taking advantage of EB- 5 include New York’s Hudson Yards, Hunter’s Point Shipyard in San Francisco, and a Trump- branded tower in Jersey City.

New projects recently doing the rounds in China’s chat rooms, Web forums and hotelballr­oom investor seminars include a 5-star hotel complex in Palm Springs, California, and what’s touted as “the world’s tallest residentia­l building,” on New York’s 57th Street, known as Billionair­es’ Row.

Because Chinese individual­s are limited to exchanging $50,000 worth of yuan a year, a 10th of what the EB-5 program requires, some agents are advising clients who don’t already have assets offshore to use a means nicknamed “smurfing” to move their money.

“Our suggestion to the client is to open three to four personal accounts in the US or line up three to four friends’ accounts, so they can split the money and wire it to different personal accounts without being put on a blacklist by the Chinese authoritie­s,” said a Shanghai-based real estate agent who gave the surname Dong. “It may require a trip to the States to do so to facilitate the process.”

CHINESE DOMINATE THE EB-5 INVESTOR VISA PROGRAM

While the government in Beijing spent much of 2016 working to stop its citizens sending money abroad in order to stabilize its declining currency and foreign reserves, Chinese investors’ use of EB-5 continued anyway, totaling $3.8 billion in the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30, according to data from the US State Department.

EB-5 started decades ago as a way to create jobs in needy US neighborho­ods by attracting foreign investment. But it has run into political opposition amid charges the program is benefiting billionair­e developers and being dominated by wealthy Chinese.

“EB-5 has been a key program for capital flight that has been abused by Americans and Chinese people seeking to game the system,” said Andrew Collier, an independen­t analyst in Hong Kong and former president of Bank of China Internatio­nal USA.

While there’s no suggestion of wrongdoing by developers that receive funding from EB-5, a series of Securities and Exchange Commission cases against EB-5-linked immigrant investor centers led the US Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services to announce last week that they would audit the centers amid concern about fraud.

DWARFING OTHERS

Chinese investors, several thousand a year, have made up as much as 85% of the annual EB-5 investor total, according to US data provided by Rosen Consulting and the Asia Society. In 2015, China overtook Canada as the biggest foreign buyer of US homes.

Changes to the EB-5 minimum would affect property developers who rely on the program as a funding channel, said Michael Shaoul, chief executive officer at Marketfiel­d Asset Management in New York.

“Any interrupti­on of the program or reduction in Chinese participat­ion would have a meaningful effect on a developmen­t cycle that is already showing signs of strain in certain key US cities,” he said by e-mail.

Investment in an EB-5 project in New York, a hotel near Central Park, allowed Shanghai resident Kevin Tai to move to the US this month. He applied with his family for the investor visa at the end of 2013. Transferri­ng more than $50,000 abroad every year was also prohibited then, so to pony up the cash, Mr. Tai used his Shanghai home as collateral to secure a $500,000 loan from Hang Seng Bank in Hong Kong, a faster route to getting cash than trying to get yuan over the border in batches. That route is now closed as well.

“I don’t recall what return rate they promoted, because that doesn’t matter,” he said just before his departure. “For most EB-5 applicants like us, the purpose is to get a permanent Green Card.”

PALM SPRINGS

The project in Palm Springs being promoted via messaging app WeChat by Dong’s firm seeks Chinese EB-5 investors for a $155-million hotel. It offers an unusually high expected annual return of 12%. By fronting a minimum of $500,000 for the 26-villa developmen­t, prospectiv­e investors become eligible to apply for a Green Card, the promotion says.

The majority of EB-5 investment­s offer very low returns in the range of 0.25% to 0.5%, said Can-Reach’s Gao.

The Central Park Tower project, now under constructi­on by the New York-based luxury condo builder Extell Developmen­t Co., will reach 1,550 feet (472 meters) and house a Nordstrom department store as well as “ultra-luxury” residences, according to the architect’s Web site. A previous downtown New York condo project by Extell, One Manhattan Square, also received funds from EB-5 and initially targeted Asian buyers.

The latest Extell tower was pitched last year to packed rooms of investors in four Chinese cities: Shanghai, Beijing, Shenzhen and Nanjing.

PACKED ROOMS

About 900 firms in China are registered to handle emigration, and most of them offer EB-5 services.

To be sure, the overall volume of money leaving China through the EB-5 channel is small — just half a percent of the $728 billion estimated by Standard Chartered Plc to have flowed out in 2016.

While capital outflows have fallen sharply in recent months as regulators increase scrutiny and the yuan holds steady, analysts say there’s pent up pressure to move money out of China.

That’s why the State Administra­tion of Foreign Exchange, the currency regulator, has been closing loopholes that allow money to be illegally channeled overseas by seeking extra disclosure. Outflows moderated in February as foreign exchange reserves rose, reversing a seven-month losing streak. Restrictio­ns include limits on overseas investment­s and acquisitio­ns, seeking more details from citizens looking to use their $50,000 quota and limits on purchases of investment­linked insurance products in Hong Kong.

ANOTHER RUSH

A slew of external risks could trigger another rush to get money out. If the Federal Reserve lifts interest rates quicker than anticipate­d, it could drive up the dollar, prompting outflows.

“Demand is strong to get money out,” said Pauline Loong, managing director at research firm Asia-Analytica Pte. in Hong Kong.

The problem, though, will likely remain how to bypass authoritie­s seeking to rigidly enforce currency rules, said Dong, the Shanghai agent.

“The biggest obstacle now is how to get $500,000 out,” he said. And especially so if the US Congress acts next month to more than double the minimum EB-5 investment. —

 ??  ?? THE BUILDING owned by the family of President Donald Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, at 666 Fifth Avenue in Manhattan, New York City is seen on March 15.
THE BUILDING owned by the family of President Donald Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, at 666 Fifth Avenue in Manhattan, New York City is seen on March 15.

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