Easier foreign ownership likely to revive property market

Nov 3rd at 15:31
03-11-2014 15:31:29+07:00

Easier foreign ownership likely to revive property market

A Construction Ministry recent proposal on creating more favourable conditions for foreigners to buy property is considered a step in the right direction to attract stronger foreign investment inflows.

Most foreigners living and working in Ho Chi Minh City are forced to rent a house because they fail to meet the strict regulations to own a house.

In Vietnam those regulations require a foreigner to have a 6-12 month visa, be married to a Vietnamese citizen, have a university degree, and make significant contribution to the national development.

The Construction Ministry has suggested easing some rigid regulations on house purchase for foreign immigrants into Vietnam in the draft law on housing submitted to the ongoing 8th session of the National Assembly (NA).

Living in Vietnam for more than four years, Troy Griffiths from Australia, who is a deputy executive director of Savills Vietnam, has to rent a house in Thao Dien ward, HCM City’s District 2 at a price of more than US$1,000/month because he has not yet met the requirements for a foreigner to gain possession of a private property in Vietnam.

Troy Griffiths says he has not bought a house due to strict regulations that limit access to bank loans for foreigners. Moreover, over the past two years, interest rates have remained rather high.

At present, Vietnam’s improved considerably macroeconomic situation has helped lowered bank interest rates, widening foreign property ownership rights in Vietnam, he notes.

Marc Townsend from the UK, who has been working in Vietnam for 11 years, is allowed to buy a house in Danang city as soon as he marries a Vietnamese citizen.

He explains to buy a house in Vietnam, you need to have a job and live in the country. Townsend says he hopes the Vietnam government will allow foreign investors who have an immigration visa to buy a house.

Marc says in other regional countries like Thailand and the Philippines, foreigners can buy 30-50% of a housing project as long as they can afford the purchase price.

Five years after Vietnam began a pilot project allowing foreigners buy property; only 126 out of 80,000 foreigners have qualified to purchase houses, mostly in Ho Chi Minh City and southern provinces.

Of them, 108 people have married Vietnamese citizens. Five others also bought a flat but they were not allowed to lease or sell it to a third party.

Le Hoang Chau, Chairman of the HCM City Real Estate Association (HoREA), showed his strong support for the draft law on housing. He affirmed the need to provide the best possible conditions for foreigners to buy a house in Vietnam.

According to the draft law, foreigners immigrating into Vietnam can buy a flat, house or villa in any housing project that the Government doesn’t ban.

Foreigners are allowed to buy up to a maximum of 30% of the flats in a housing project. They also can buy as many as 250 houses or villas in the same ward.

The more open policy on property market is considered a form of export. Instead of shipping products such as cement, steel and guest workers abroad, the country can earn a large amount of hard currency by making it easier for foreigners to buy houses.

Dr. Le Ba Chi Nhan, a real estate expert, said foreigners who want to own a house in Vietnam just need to immigrate into the country. This will help to lure more cash inflows into the local real estate, which has been frozen for years, he added.

Opening up the market to foreign buyers is suitable with the current integration trend. However, it is essential to pay attention to Vietnamese low-income earners who are in need of accommodation.

Most NA deputies at the ongoing session agreed with the draft law, and expressed their hope that new regulations would soon be adopted.

vir



NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Apartment project in Phu My Hung sells out on first day

 Scenic Valley, a new apartment complex in HCM City's Phu My Hung area, sold all of its 109 units on the first day of its second phase of sales.

Savills property price index up in major cities

The Savills property price index (SPPI) for residential and office markets here and in HCM City increased in the third quarter of 2014.

More Japanese investing in Vietnam’s property market

Singaporean, South Korean and Taiwanese investors have been the traditional investors in the property sector, but more Japanese companies have been pouring money...

Dusit Thani’s officially steps into Vietnam

Famous Thailand resort management Dusit International on October 24 reached official signing of hotel management agreement to operate their first property in...

Real-estate giant Vingroup enters retail sector, redraws market map

Vingroup’s leap into the retail market is expected to give Vietnamese retailers better opportunities in the domestic market, which is dominated by foreign players.

Hanoi planning three new towns in outskirts

The Hanoi Municipal People’s Committee has just enacted decisions approving the general planning of three new towns in the city’s outskirts – Tay Dang in Ba Vi...

Home purchase by foreigners-on-the-spot real estate export

Vietnam is considering changing the amended Housing Law, which is under discussion, to make it easier for foreigners and Vietnamese expatriates to buy houses in the...

The Point is put up for sale in Hanoi

VinaLiving, VinaCapital’s real estate brand and Savills Vietnam on October 23 put up for sale The Point – a golf villa development at Danang Beach Resort.

Megamall in HCM City to be completed by year-end

Real estate investor Vingroup will invest in a megamall in HCM City's District 2 that will be part of the luxury Masteri Thao Dien project.

Capital suffers office for lease redundancy

Hanoi’s office-for-lease market faces potentially large inventories since the Lotte Hanoi Centre opened.

Real estate stocks

Construction stocks


MOST READ


Back To Top