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Foreigners cold to home buys despite policy flip
By Hu Yuanyuan (China Daily)
Updated: 2009-02-13 09:30

Eric Chan, a Hong Kong resident currently working in Beijing, had been feeling gung-ho ever since the city's municipal government reversed on Jan 23 its policy of restraining foreigners from home purchases.

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The move had meant he could now think of buying a new house in the capital (apart from the one he owns in Guangzhou where he used to work three years ago) once home prices started to fall further.

But industry veterans said Beijing's property market has not witnessed much enthusiasm from foreigners after the policy reversal.

New enquires by foreigners have not shown an obvious increase in the past few days, said Hu Hanxiang, marketing manager of Star-River, a high-end residential project located along Beijing's East Fourth-Ring Road.

"They may be waiting for detailed rules supporting the loosening-up policy," he pointed out. On the other hand, the sluggishness could also be due to "January and February being usually dull months for property sales", he said.

Jin Bo, marketing manager of Yintai Center, said enquiries for Park Hyatt Penthouses, the most expensive apartment in Beijing, has also not seen an up tick.

"We have less than 10 units left. Most of our foreign buyers may have thought that we have sold them all," Jin explained.

For Chan, the rules relaxation could not have come at a better time. "I've been thinking of buying a new house in Beijing ever since I moved to the capital. The cancellation of the restraint offers me a fair chance," he said. He however clarified that he would not rush in to purchase an apartment as he believed there was yet room for property prices to fall.

"The luxury residential apartments, which I am targeting, have had very low transaction volumes since the latter half of 2008. So, I am still waiting for a more rational price," said Chan.

Although Shanghai still has not changed its home-purchase policy for foreigners, experts believe Beijing's move may well be turn out to be a trend-setter.


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