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TRADE WARS
China overtakes US as Australia's largest foreign investor
by Staff Writers
Sydney (AFP) May 1, 2015


Australia toughens property ownership laws for foreigners
Sydney (AFP) May 2, 2015 - Foreigners who break rules on buying Australian real estate will face up to three years in jail or fines of Aus$127,500 (US$100,050) for individuals and Aus$637,500 for companies under tougher rules unveiled Saturday.

In announcing the changes, conservative Prime Minister Tony Abbott said his government was in favour of foreign investment.

"But it does have to be the right foreign investment, in the right things, and we do need to have a foreign investment review system which encourages public confidence that the foreign investment we need really is in Australia's national interest," Abbott said.

Foreigners are only allowed to buy new dwellings and are barred from purchasing existing residential property in Australia, but the government argues there has been little enforcement of the rules.

Cashed-up foreigners, many from China, have been blamed for driving up prices in Australian property markets, particularly in Sydney and Melbourne, and placing home ownership out of reach of many locals.

Abbott said that under the changes enforcement would be beefed up, while third parties such as real estate agents who knowingly assisted a foreigner to breach the rules would be fined up to $42,500 for individuals and $212,500 for companies.

The changes come after the government earlier this year announced it would introduce fees on all foreign investment applications, starting at $5,000 for residential properties valued at $1 million or less.

Treasurer Joe Hockey said the government was already investigating some 100 cases of illegal purchases, and one divestment order had already been issued on a property that was now in the process of being sold to an Australian.

In March, Australia ordered China's Evergrande Real Estate Group to sell a Sydney mansion worth Aus$39 million that it said was bought illegally under foreign investment rules.

Hockey said foreign investors who have purchased illegally had a moratorium until November 30 to come forward.

"They will be forced to sell their properties but they will not be subject to criminal prosecution by the Commonwealth government," Hockey told a press conference with Abbott in Sydney.

"If you do not come to us we will come to you."

Abbott said the changes were not designed to discourage foreign investment or to depress the property market, but to give people confidence that "locals are getting a fair go" in buying their own homes.

"If you play by the rules, there is no more welcoming place than Australia," he added.

China has for the first time overtaken the United States as Australia's largest source of foreign investment, according to official data, laying out Aus$27.7 billion (US$21.8 billion) in 2013-14 as real estate purchases more than doubled.

The Asian economic giant's spending in Australia for the year ending June 30, 2014 far outstripped the Aus$17.5 billion from the United States -- which was the biggest investor for more than a decade -- and Canada's Aus$15.4 billion, the Foreign Investment Review Board (FIRB) said in its annual report.

The Chinese surge was driven by Aus$12.4 billion in approved investments in property, the report released Thursday said. That compares with Aus$5.9 billion in the previous financial year.

"For the first time, China was the largest source of proposed foreign investment in Australia, mainly driven by a large increase in residential real estate approvals," the report said.

The new report followed the Australian government's move in February to enforce foreign investment rules as concerns grow that foreign buyers are squeezing local house seekers out of the market.

Chinese investment for 2013-14 also included Aus$3.3 billion in the manufacturing sector, Aus$5.7 billion in mining and Aus$6.2 billion in services.

Rounding up the top five foreign investors were Malaysia at Aus$7.2 billion and Singapore at Aus$7.1 billion.

The Australia government in February highlighted plans to crack down on illegal property purchases and charge application fees on all foreign investments.

Cashed-up foreigners, many from China, have been blamed for driving up prices in Australian property markets, particularly Sydney and Melbourne, and placing home ownership out of reach of many locals.

In March, the government ordered China's Evergrande Real Estate Group to sell a Sydney mansion worth Aus$39 million, saying it was bought illegally under foreign investment rules.

The FIRB's annual report said overall approved foreign investment in residential real estate in 2013-14 was Aus$34.7 billion from Aus$17.2 billion in the previous corresponding period.

China is already Australia's largest trading partner, with the nation's key mining sector dependent on its Asian neighbour's demand for resources.

China's total investment in Australia for 2012-13 was at Aus$15.8 billion, which had made it the third-largest investor behind the US and Switzerland, with the European nation's spending driven by a Aus$15.8 billion splurge in mining.


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