Chinese buyers shift interest in Canadian property due to tax
VANCOUVER - Fewer Chinese prospective buyers are considering Vancouver properties in the Canadian province of British Columbia (B.C.), following its implementation eight months ago of a 15-percent tax on foreign residential real estate buyers.
Brad Henderson, president and CEO of Sotheby's International Realty Canada, told Xinhua on Tuesday that the B.C. foreign buyers tax, which was levied for the first time in Vancouver, has scared off prospective Chinese buyers from Vancouver.
His remarks were based on a new study entitled China to Canada: International Home Buyer Insights, which was co-released on March 7 by Sotheby's International Realty Canada and Juwai.com, an international property website for Chinese buyers of overseas property.
"I think what've seen is a consistent, not only drop in interest from people looking on Juwai, but also from people in buying in the Vancouver marketplace as a result of that tax," Henderson said.
According to the study, Chinese inquiries for listings in the Vancouver property market fell by 81 percent year-over-year in July 2016, the month the B.C. government unveiled its 15-percent tax on foreign buyers of residential property.
The tax aimed to cool a regional housing market that saw extremely high prices and crisis-level shortages of affordable housing.
The drop of queries by Chinese prospective buyers fell throughout the remainder of 2016, down the most by 78 percent year-over-year in August and the least by 9 percent in November.
The study also found that Chinese interest in Canadian real estate has shifted to other major Canadian cities following the B.C. foreign buyers tax.
For instance, queries in the city of Calgary in the province of Alberta increased by 1,050 percent in August year-over-year and by 420 percent in September.
Meanwhile, searches on Juwai for Toronto, Canada's largest city in the province of Ontario, rose by 62 percent year-over-year in August and by 72 percent in September.
Yet Henderson stressed that the Vancouver market still appears healthy despite less interest from Chinese buyers.
"The Gross Domestic Product growth in Vancouver is better than that in Canada," Henderson said. "The same is true with the unemployment rate. Business confidence continues to be very high. It continues to be an attractive market (for those) who want to live and work, whether they're from Canada or from outside Canada."
A major problem facing Vancouver is a shortage of developable land for housing, he said. "So, when you have a strong demand and you add to it a constrained supply, you have a market that will have increasing pressures on price."
The market still appears to be digesting the foreign buyers tax, according to Henderson. "We think a number of people sitting on the sidelines just want to make sure that there's no additional policies coming down the pipe or that this is going to have an adverse effect on the market."
Based on the study, nearly 44 percent of potential property buyers from China cited education among their top motivations to search for property in Vancouver.
The data also indicated that the majority of properties searched for on Juwai were listed at below C$600,000 ($450,011).
Last week, the B.C. government announced it loosened the foreign buyers tax to exempt international residents from provincial work permits, and would provide refunds to some who already paid the tax.
Meanwhile, homes prices in Vancouver remain high. The composite benchmark price for all residential properties in Metro Vancouver is currently C$906,700 ($680,042), according to the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver. That represents a 2.8-percent decrease over the past six months and a 1.2-percent increase compared with January 2017.
Adil Dinani, a Vancouver realtor with Royal LePage, told Xinhua on Tuesday that the interest in the luxury-end of real estates in the region does seem to be wavering, but deals worth less than 1 million Canadian dollars ($750,019) remain robust.
"Every condo I've listed, every townhouse I've listed in the past 30 days, I've had multiple listings on," he said.
"We're still seeing a lot of people get excited about new construction developments in Vancouver and in the surrounding suburb areas: Burnaby, Richmond and corridors even further east," he said. "Every time a new project comes up, it's establishing a new (price) benchmark."