Nelson Mail

Foreigners rush to beat buyer ban

- Susan Edmunds susan.edmunds@stuff.co.nz

A rush of foreign buyers snapped up New Zealand homes, trying to get in to the market before a law change made it impossible to do so, new data suggests.

Changes to the Overseas Investment Amendment Act prohibitin­g foreign buyers purchasing existing residentia­l property in New Zealand will take effect on Monday.

But Chinese internatio­nal real estate website Juwai said buyers had tried to beat it.

There was a 59 per cent increase in Chinese buyer inquiries on New Zealand residentia­l property on the site in the third quarter of this year.

Statistics New Zealand data shows the percentage of buyers who do not have a residency visa – and who will be excluded under the new laws – has been running at less than 3 per cent.

That does not include buyers using corporate entities. They make up another 8 per cent of the market.

Juwai chief executive Carrie Law said she expected foreign buyer transactio­ns to fall away over the rest of the year because of the number that had been hurried through.

They would then most likely pick up again from early next year.

‘‘New own-use buyers will enter the market, and developers will have the undivided attention of offshore investors who can no longer purchase secondhand property.’’

Brad Olsen, an economist from Infometric­s, said the data was in line with what he would expect.

‘‘What’s interestin­g is exactly what we define as a foreign buyer – this is something we haven’t been able to nail down in the property transfer statistics from Statistics NZ yet,’’ Olsen said.

‘‘There may be a small group of those who will remain eligible to buy property, who may have nonetheles­s been spooked by all the discussion around the ban, who may also be trying to buy property before the ban.’’

He said the foreign buyer ban might increase downward pressure on house sales volumes in the near term. ‘‘However, with both house price growth and house sales already slowing, we don’t expect the ban to have a major impact on the housing market moving forward.’’

Law said it was other migration settings that made a bigger impact.

‘‘In the long run, rules for work visas and permanent residency are more important for Chinese buying in New Zealand than are foreign buyer restrictio­ns,’’ she said.

‘‘Most Chinese buyers here are purchasing for their own use while living in New Zealand. They are able to buy as locals rather than offshore buyers.’’

She said buyers were pleased to see the Government temper its ban. It originally required foreigners who bought apartments from plans to sell them once the building was complete.

Now the ban will allow foreign buyers to hang on to apartments or houses bought off the plan, as long as they are part of a developmen­t that is 20 or more units large.

Existing homes and apartments remain totally unreachabl­e for foreigners who do not intend to live in New Zealand for the long term.

Law said Chinese liked safe property investment­s that were easy to manage.

‘‘They often prefer new or likenew property that is central, convenient, close to schools and universiti­es, and easily rented.

‘‘Many Chinese are worried about the Chinese real estate market and the Chinese economy. They want a safe investment overseas in a country that perhaps they also might like to live in one day.’’

‘‘Most Chinese buyers here are purchasing for their own use while living in New Zealand.’’ Juwai chief executive Carrie Law

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