Canyon Lake Ranch was once a playground for Christian day campers and then was a corporate retreat with water skiing, barbecues and cowboy shoot-’em-up shows. Hawks now circle above 43.7 sunbaked hectares occupied by copperhead snakes, a few coyotes and the occasional construction truck.
Soon, this ranch will be a gated subdivision of 99 mini-mansions designed for buyers from China. The developer, Zhang Long, a Beijing businessman, is keeping three plots to build his own estate along the site of an old rodeo arena.
This luxury development 56km northwest of Dallas is the latest frontier in a global buying phenomenon as Chinese money becomes a major force in real estate around the world. The flood of money is likely to persist, despite the tumult in China. While a currency devaluation and stock market crash have crimped the country’s buying power overseas, the resulting uncertainty is making many Chinese individuals and companies eager to invest anywhere except their home country.
Ilustration: Mountain People
In London, Chinese investors are purchasing high-end apartments in wealthy neighborhoods and big skyscrapers in the financial district. In Canada, they are paying US$1 million for modest Vancouver bungalows. In Australia, a Chinese sovereign wealth fund bought nine office towers, one of the biggest real-estate transactions in that nation’s history.
In the US, the home-buying spree began on the coasts, where Chinese buyers snapped up luxury condos in Manhattan and McMansions in Silicon Valley, pushing up home values in big cities. It is now spreading to the middle of the country, where prices are more modest and have room to run.
The homes in Corinth, Texas, are to feature two master suites, one for the buyers, the other for aging parents. A concierge service is to help new arrivals from overseas order Internet service and pay electric bills. Chauffeurs are to ferry homeowners until they learn to navigate the loops and spurs of Texas freeways.
“When Chairman Zhang saw the strength of the Texan economy, he decided it was time that the Asian community should be presented an opportunity to invest in the ‘American dream,’ marketing materials for the development read.
The great property rush is part of the tidal wave of Chinese money that is pouring into the global economy and reshaping financial markets. In residential and commercial real estate, the flow of cash is upending the traditional dynamics of buying and selling.
This year, Chinese families represented for the first time the largest group of overseas homebuyers in the US. Big spenders on new homes are helping prop up local economies in the Midwest.
However, in dense areas like San Francisco and Manhattan, they are also affecting the affordability and availability of housing, as demand outpaces supply and bidding wars ensue.
While Chinese purchases make up a small sliver of overall sales in the US, they have had a disproportionate impact on the market for more expensive properties, buying one in 14 homes sold for more than US$1 million. On average, buyers from Taiwan, China and Hong Kong pay US$831,800 for a home, more than three times as much as Americans spend, according to a US National Association of Realtors survey.
Some Chinese are buying homes purely as investments, capitalizing on surging rents in many parts of the US. Others are trying to move their money beyond the reach of the Chinese government.
Many buyers have their children’s education in mind, picking up homes in good school districts or close to universities. At the upper echelon, the wealthy are hoping for green cards, joining with developers to take advantage of a federal program that fast-tracks them for residency.
Eric Du, a management and investment consultant from Beijing, was motivated by the potential for his family and his fortune. Over the past two years, he bought a town house — sight unseen — and two single-family homes in Northbrook, Illinois, north of Chicago. He paid cash for all of them.
He plans to live in one, to give his children a chance to breathe cleaner air and learn at a better school than he could find in his hometown. He is to rent out the other two.
“The price of property in Beijing is very high, the stock market is crashing and the real economy is not stable,” Du said of the environment in China. “The people here have some money, but they don’t have enough good ways to invest their money.”
In Shanghai, not far from the banks of the Huangpu River, the offices of Windham Realty are tucked inside a glassy tower where the walls feature a poster of a development in Michigan: the Stonewater community on 148 hectares in Northville, a suburb of Detroit.
“The most magnificent waterfront community and the most grand eco-redevelopment project in the US,” the poster reads, highlighting six artificial lakes and 424 luxury villas.
Other posters of properties line the office space: chic town houses in San Diego; a golf course community in Fort Myers, Florida; spacious homes in a Los Angeles development.
Eager to tap the new market of buyers, the US real-estate firm has established two offices in China. The first opened in Shanghai in 2007; the second opened in Beijing last year. The firm has attracted clients with events like traditional US Thanksgiving dinners and real-estate showcases where Chinese film stars appear.
“The market is definitely larger and broader than when we started,” Windham China chief executive Steven Lawson said. “They’re very different than the people we were working with in 2007. If we want to cut right to it, they’re less wealthy, a lot younger and a lot better educated from an international point of view.”
The company is among many hoping to capture the wealth pouring out of China.
Chinese buyers spent US$28.6 billion on US homes in the year ended in March, more than double their purchases two years before, according to the association.
Chinese purchases in overseas commercial real estate jumped 49 percent last year, Jones Lang LaSalle, a big real-estate brokerage firm, has estimated.
The real-estate deals follow a broader exodus of money from China to countries and companies around the world.
An estimated US$590 billion moved out of China in the 12 months through June, according to Fitch Ratings.
And the amount of outflows most likely set a record in the third quarter, although detailed data will not be available until later this month. In the past, they tended to stay under US$200 billion per year.
The swell of funds from China represents the confluence of several trends.
Over the past six years, the Chinese government has kept the country awash with cash to stimulate the economy, which means a lot of extra money available to slosh abroad. The Chinese government has also made it easier for individuals to move large sums out of the country, as part of a broader liberalization of the nation’s heavily regulated financial system.
The government is loosening the rules for corporations, too. Beijing allows insurance companies to invest as much as 15 percent of their assets overseas, helping drive a surge in commercial purchases.
Chinese companies have been buying stakes in US trophy properties like the General Motors Building and the Waldorf Astoria in New York. The situation is drawing comparisons to the 1980s, when Japanese companies invested heavily in US commercial real estate at premium prices.
However, the high-flying deals might have only just begun. By the end of last year, Chinese insurers had only 1.44 percent of their money overseas.
“The Chinese are deliberate; there would clearly be large capital flows coming to the West,” said Stephen Schwarzman, chief executive of the Blackstone Group, the largest private landlord in the US. “That would increase in frequency until the Chinese government decides it shouldn’t happen anymore — they’ve opened the spigot.”
Companies are racing to develop services for Chinese customers. This year Zillow, the real-estate search Web site, began publishing its database of US homes on a Chinese real-estate site, Leju.com. US real-estate agents are advertising in Chinese newspapers.
On the front lines are brokers in the Dallas suburbs like Roddy de la Garza, who arrives at homes with a video camera and a compass. The camera is for sharing video of house tours with his clients who live in China; the compass is to make sure the homes have a north-south alignment, to ensure proper energy flow in accordance with Chinese principles of feng shui.
“I’ve learned these things, so they trust me,” said De la Garza, who works for the realty firm Redfin.
Last summer, Scott Hogg, a Dallas real-estate agent, helped a client bid on a home near the Plano-Frisco line for about US$220,000.
The bid from his client, who needed a mortgage, was rejected. The home went to a Chinese buyer who paid cash.
“We lost out,” Hogg said. “It’s just this market. It’s insane.”
For typical US homebuyers who require mortgages, the influx of Chinese money makes it even more challenging in markets facing low inventory and rising prices.
A majority of home purchases by Chinese buyers — 69 percent — are entirely cash, according to the realtors’ association.
Such bids often rise to the top for sellers who can then close on a deal in little more than a weekend. Even in Silicon Valley, a market awash in millionaires, Chinese buyers — if they pay cash — can edge out tech entrepreneurs whose wealth is tied up in stock options.
“There are even bidding wars between cash buyers now,” said Sam Van Horebeek, a director at East-West Property Advisors, a China-based firm that connects Chinese buyers with US real-estate agents.
Outside the US, the Chinese demand has been so great that some places are trying to temper it.
Hong Kong and Singapore have each imposed 15 percent taxes on non-resident buyers of residential real estate. In Australia, the state government of Victoria, which includes Melbourne, introduced a 3 percent tax on overseas buyers.
Still, some places are welcoming the economic activity. City coffers benefit from stronger property tax revenue. Many overseas arrivals are relatively wealthy, spending on cars and furniture, as well as everyday shopping and dining.
The interest from Chinese buyers is reshaping demographics in Texas. As the volume of Asian purchases grow, the number of Mexican buyers, historically the largest category from abroad, is leveling off.
In fast-growing Plano, a northern suburb, the number of people born in China swelled to about 6,000 in 2010, from 3,600 in 2000 — and the group has since expanded. The area is such a popular destination that this spring American Airlines began operating a direct flight to Beijing, the airline’s second non-stop from Dallas to a Chinese city, after Shanghai.
In Corinth, a town of 20,000, the development on the old ranch site is expected to bring hundreds of thousands of US dollars per year in property taxes and fees. The average price of the new homes is US$2 million.
The Corinth City Council unanimously approved the development in Corinth, where a Chicken Express and an AutoZone abut a highway along the south side of town. Zhang’s company is planning a strip of high-end businesses, including restaurants, a spa and a wine shop that is to sell bottles from a vineyard that the developer started just across the Oklahoma border.
“This will be a positive cash flow,” Corinth city manager Rick Chaffin said. “I’d say it would be significant.”
In the Dallas area, the Chinese boom traces its roots to Taiwanese immigration in the 1980s.
Back then, Texas Instruments was starting to make headway in the semiconductor business. The company had a strong presence first in Taiwan and later in China, recruiting there for its operations.
As Texas Instruments grew and the technology boom in the US took off, students from China began arriving to study engineering in hopes of getting a job at the home office. The company hosted English classes for its new employees and cultural events to help them feel at home.
Soon, a small strip of Chinese restaurants and an Asian market sprouted in Richardson, along with a community center offering a library of Chinese books, tai chi classes and country line dancing. In 2001, Huawei, a major Chinese telecom company, opened its US headquarters in Plano.
With their own economy growing quickly, the Chinese arrivals were armed with more money and wanted newer, more expensive homes than Richardson’s usual stock of ranch-style homes built in the 1950s. They found them nearby in towns including Plano and Frisco, part of the supercharged suburban sprawl. Chinese families have clustered in the new brick houses in subdivisions fortified by brick walls, with names like Whiffletree, Spring Ridge and Hunters Glen North.
“Chinese people like newer areas,” said Charlie Yue, who moved from Beijing to the Dallas area in the late 1990s as a student.
He bought a new house in Frisco five years ago and now runs a real-estate investment firm, snapping up homes that linger on the market.
“I’ve traveled to Los Angeles and San Francisco, and I feel like I’ve gone back to China. Texas is wide open, with so much space, which I really love,” said Yue, who is also vice president of the Association of Chinese Professionals in Richardson. “If you consider how expensive housing is in Beijing or Shanghai, this is a bargain.”
Steve Robinette, an administrator at Missouri State University, often plays tour guide to newly arriving Chinese students. The university, which operates a campus in China, has about 900 Chinese students at its main campus in Springfield.
Not long ago, one student’s mother came to him seeking help with a major purchase. He assumed she wanted a recommendation for a car dealer, but she was looking for a real-estate agent.
“When I take them around to the better areas of Springfield, if there’s a For Sale sign, they’ll jump out and grab a flier,” said Robinette, the university’s associate vice president for international programs.
Education plays an outsize role in Chinese families’ decisions to buy US real estate.
While college enrollment in China is soaring, top schools have limited space. Almost all of the expansion is taking place at poorly regarded universities and polytechnics. Students unable to win admission to prestigious universities frequently apply to US schools if their families can afford it.
At the university level, Chinese make up 31 percent of international students in the US, according to the US Institute of International Education.
While New York, Los Angeles and Boston are popular destinations for Chinese students, more are attending universities in the Midwest, with its giant institutions like Ohio State and Michigan State.
Their parents often buy homes in college towns. St Louis real-estate listings — homes that average nearly US$800,000 — are attracting buyers on the Chinese real-estate Web site Juwai.com.
The influx of Chinese students is most likely the reason, said Simon Henry, the company’s co-chief executive.
“If you look at the student populations of any major or non-major university, you’ll get a really good indication of what property prices are going to do,” Henry said.
The push starts young. About 23,500 Chinese citizens were enrolled in US high schools in 2013, the most recent year for which figures were available.
Echo Zha, from Beijing, is renting an apartment in Naperville, Illinois, so her 12-year-old daughter can attend school there. She also spent about US$200,000 on a small, one-bedroom apartment in Chicago, where she hopes to collect enough rental income to also buy a home in Naperville.
“In the schools in Beijing, students with high-powered parents or rich parents are given special treatment by the teachers,” Zha said. “I want my daughter to be in a more fair environment and to grow up with more character and values.”
Ann Irvine, the principal of Harrington Elementary in Plano, said several Chinese families whose children attended her school had bought two homes simultaneously.
One, she said, was for attending Harrington, which has a bilingual Mandarin-English preschool, and the other to ensure spots later for their children at a high school in a different area.
“We’re not talking mansions,” Irvine said. “We’re talking nice homes with research done thoroughly and the best price point attained.”
For Zhang, the old ranch in Corinth was somewhat of an impulse buy.
A lawyer by training, Zhang, 42, came to know Texas during airport layovers while traveling between the coasts for his work, which spans technology, mining, wealth management and other industries. A Chinese friend in Dallas started talking about a patch of undeveloped land in Corinth.
Two years ago, Zhang paid US$6.8 million in cash for Canyon Lake Ranch, his first foray into US real estate. He renamed the lake after himself; it is now Long Lake.
“I chose Dallas because the unique culture of the city was evident on my first visit and has since impressed me with every return visit,” Zhang said in a statement. “Compared to other US metropolitan areas, Dallas presents numerous prospects for all walks of life, drawing people from across the country and globally.”
Vivian Tsou, chief operating officer and president of Lelege USA, Zhang’s development company, put it bluntly: “The bang for your buck is higher here.”
Overseas real-estate speculation by Chinese investors started to rise after the recession in the US began to recede in 2009. The two markets have been out of sync, creating opportunities. US home prices have been in a recovery phase, while the Chinese boom has been fading.
Millions of Chinese are looking to park their money in countries where there is less risk of arbitrary confiscation and more political stability. Some want to obscure the true extent of their wealth, while others are trying to diversify their assets.
China’s history of corruption has also left people vulnerable.
According to state media, former Chongqing party boss Bo Xilai (薄熙來) and his aides ordered the confiscation of as much as US$15 billion from wealthy families, who were accused of crimes based on sometimes flimsy evidence. Bo, a former member of the Politburo of the Chinese Communist Party, is serving a life sentence for bribery, embezzlement and abuse of power.
A recent Goldman Sachs analysis found that some types of capital outflows closely follow Chinese anti-corruption campaigns. As crackdowns intensify in China, outflows tend to increase.
Investments in the US provide another advantage: a pathway to a green card.
Chinese investors have been particularly aggressive at using a federal visa program called EB-5 that allows overseas citizens to put between US$500,000 and US$1 million into a project that would create at least 10 jobs. Investors can get a green card in about two years. So far this year, 86 percent of the EB-5 visas issued worldwide have gone to Chinese.
While the homes in the development at Long Lake are also being marketed locally, Chinese buyers are eligible for this program.
“These high-caliber homes will bring high-caliber residents,” Tsou said.
Ida Hung, a real-estate agent and feng shui specialist in the Dallas office of the Virginia Cook agency, which has the exclusive listing for the Long Lake development, peddles the homes to contacts in the area’s Chinese community and beyond. On a recent afternoon, she stopped at Tam’s, a Chinese buffet in Richardson.
In the past decade or so, the restaurant’s owner, Wing Tam, has bought seven condos and houses that ranged in price from US$20,000 to US$500,000 — one for his sister, one for an employee in his kitchen, one for his wife, one because it was a good price, one for investment purposes and so on. He paid cash for them all, except for his own Dallas home, which he bought in 2008 with a mortgage he has since paid off.
During a busy lunch hour, he pored over the materials for the Corinth development, but decided the location was a bit too remote. He offered to put Hung in touch with Chinese friends who live in Arkansas.
“They are very rich. They don’t know how to spend their money,” said Tam, tucking one of the brochures under his arm. “They need to invest.”
Vanessa Piao and Zhang Ruoyao contributed research
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