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    Current page location: Home Page > Article > Jingdong launched overseas housing this month
    Jingdong launched overseas housing this month
    Browse volume:315 | Reply:0 | Release time:2018-04-13 14:16:20

    The Chinese e-commerce giant JD.com is set to start listing properties in the UK, Australia, Canada and the US, boosting the exposure of overseas properties to millions of potential investors in China.

    The start of this month. its platform apartments in the four countries from international-focused online property company Juwai, which has more than 2 million listings around the world.

    The move by JD, which has nearly 300m customers, comes as China makes a series of reforms to loosen its capital controls and open the country up to more foreign investment.

    Juwai, which has seen a 10 per cent pick up in Chinese buying inquiries last month, expects an increase in Chinese international property buying if the capital controls continue to be unwound.

    “We know there is tremendous pent-up demand for overseas real estate, with stability and diversification more important to most buyers than capital gains and yields,” said Juwai chief executive Carrie Law.
    In 2016, policymakers in Beijing restricted outward investment by Chinese companies and tightened capital controls in a bid to stabilise the economy. As a result, non-financial Chinese foreign direct investment in the first 10 months of 2017 dropped by 40.9 per cent against the same period a year earlier, a report from the Economist Intelligence Unit showed, citing data from China's commerce ministry.
    But Chinese leaders now appear increasingly relaxed about cross-border capital flows amid a more stable economy and a weaker US currency: the renminbi is trading near highs last seen in 2015.

    Early last month Beijing eased the rules for Chinese businesses investing overseas. New measures under China’s National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), which came into force on March 1, are expected to “encourage prudent and well considered future outbound investments by Chinese businesses,” especially if it is linked to China’s political objectives like the Belt and Road programme and advanced technology, KPMG said.

    Chinese regulators have also revived a programme allowing global asset managers to raise funds from Chinese onshore clients for investment in offshore hedge funds. The was halted in 2016 amid concern about capital flight the depreciation of the Chinese currency.

    While the latest measures may help to reopen the door to a flood of Chinese investors hoping to buy offshore, some countries, including New Zealand, are looking at laws to restrict foreigners from buying homes.
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