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ASIA/PACIFIC & INTERNATIONAL REAL ESTATE 4. A Look at China Page 57 Slide 4-1 Geography Page 58 Slide 4-2 12th Five Year Plan Inclusive growth Restructure the economy Reduce social inequality Protect the environment Strategic Emerging Industries (SEIs) Page 60 Slide 4-3 Holding local governments accountable for meeting green development targets Tracking energy consumption per unit of GDP Reducing emissions with “blue sky day” targets Greening of China Page 61 Slide 4-4 7 Strategic Emerging Industries Biotechnology New energy High-end equipment manufacturing Energy conservation, environment protection Clean-energy vehicles New materials Next generation IT Page 61 Slide 4-5 FDI $776 billion FDI in China $332 billion Chinese FDI Abroad China Investment Corporation— $3.2 trillion Guanxi Page 47 Slide 4-6 Rising Renminbi? When will the renminbi achieve hardcurrency status? Renminbi-denominated international deals Capital flows freely in and out Foreign banks hold reserves Free-floating, fully convertible Could reshape the world’s financial markets Unleash individual and sovereign wealth Page 65 Slide 4-7 Dim Sum Bonds Page 66 Renminbi-denominated bonds Avoids government restrictions on foreign debt, but government controls Invest in China and Hong Kong-based companies Fixed-asset investments only Slide 4-8 Real Estate in China Government owns all land, grants leases Regulations emanate from national level Provincial and local implementation can vary considerably Page 66 Slide 4-9 Cooling the Market Market swings Fear of real state bubble Home buyers priced out of market Widespread dissatisfaction with property prices Competition from speculators Government action to cool market Page 67 Slide 4-10 Government Actions 1st home—30 % down payment 2nd home—60% down payment 3rd home—no mortgage financing Developers cannot bid on more land if already own idle land Overseas residents one home for own use Hong Kong—additional Stamp Duty Page 67 Slide 4-11 Financing Many cash deals Age limit on mortgage borrower—65 years Minimum interest rate—1.1 times People’s Bank of China benchmark rate Seller must pay off mortgage before the property can be sold Page 68 Slide 4-12 Granted Land Rights Allocated for a specific purpose Cannot be sold, transferred, pledged, or mortgaged Granted for residential or commercial purposes May be pledged, mortgaged, leased, inherited, and transferred Page 68 Renewable leases 70 years residential 50 years industrial 40 years commercial Renewal regulations TBD Major source of revenue for local government Slide 4-13 Rental Property Pro-landlord Regulated by local governments, no national laws 2–3 months rent security deposit No automatic renewal Landlord can terminate at any time No subleasing Page 68 Slide 4-14 Can Foreigners Own Real Estate in China? Work or study in China for more than a year Personal residence, cannot be rented out One house only One non-residential property for business Property held less than 5 years subject to 5.5% tax on entire transaction Page 69 Slide 4-15 Real Estate Professionals in China Sales agents must be licensed National Ministry of Construction oversees Open listing real estate market Negotiable commissions paid by the seller Agents do not share property information Agencies post listing on own web sites Storefront real estate firms Page 70 Slide 4-16 Inflation hedge Income from rentals Safe haven investments Avoid ownership restrictions Build a family legacy Education for children The Big Story Chinese Buyers Abroad Page 47 Future emigration, career development Slide 4-17 China’s Millionaires 1 million+ millionaires Sources of wealth 55% private-business owners 20% property speculators 15% stock market investors 10% high-salaried executives Page 73 Prefer real estate investment 4 of 5 wealthy parents want to send children abroad for studies To English-speaking countries—USA, UK, Canada Slide 4-18 What Does This Mean For You? New and growing stream of business Establish and maintain a robust referral network Professionalism, reliability, trustworthiness earns repeat and referral business Graduates may stay on to establish careers and build businesses Page 47 Slide 4-19 Doing Business in China Beyond the Basics Names Connections— Guanxi Negotiations and contracts Interpreters Women in business Demeanor Business cards Business dining Meetings A few taboos Page 78-83 Slide 4-20