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Strategies & Market Trends : The Residential Real Estate Crash Index -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: CalculatedRisk who wrote (35903)7/21/2005 7:18:12 AM
From: Crimson GhostRead Replies (2) | Respond to of 306849
 
Foreigners pouring into US real estate market.

Another sign that we are at or near a top?

OUTSOURCING TO AMERICA

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR - Earlier this year, real estate marketer
Melissa Rubin took some South American clients to a party to promote a
new condo that developers hoped to sell before a shovel hit the ground.

Even by Miami standards, the party was exotic. There were tigers,
chimps, human flamethrowers, jumbo TVs, and the usual red-carpet food
and drink. There was also a bikini-clad woman covered in chocolate [Jim:
emphasis added, sorry, no photo available]. "If we take them to a party,
it helps them get excited about the project," says Ms. Rubin of Platinum
Properties International.

Indeed, developers are going all-out to charm their clients, and more
and more those clients include the world's wealthy elite from such
countries as Argentina, Mexico, Australia, and Germany. These foreign
buyers, in fact, are one of the important reasons the housing bubble
continues to grow in hot markets like Miami, New York, and Las Vegas. In
many cases, they're taking advantage of the strong euro or trying to get
their money into a dollar-denominated hiding place.

The result: In Miami, for one, some condo buildings have as much as
two-thirds of their units owned by foreigners. Call it America for Sale.
. .

Although there are no numbers indicating how much foreigners are pouring
into the United States to buy condos, there are some eye-opening
anecdotal signs:

- In Las Vegas, wealthy foreign buyers - mostly from Mexico - have
snapped up 12 percent of the condos at Icon, twin 48-story towers that
are now almost sold out even though they won't start construction until
next month.

- New York City real estate brokers estimate that up to 33 percent of
new condos sold in the city are going to non-Americans, especially
Europeans, who one broker describes as "very aggressive."

- Asian buyers are jumping in, too. Real estate agents are flying to
Shanghai, Beijing, Bangkok, and Kuala Lumpur to talk up the property
market. Recently, a large group of Korean finance, construction,
insurance, and engineering executives conducted a "study tour" of
southeast Florida real estate. They plan to return next April.