Insiders say it may take time to fully evaluate the impacts of the new policy that allows foreigners to own a home here.
Ho Chi Minh City's property market
experiences strong growth in the last quarter of 2016. Photo by
VnExpress/Nguyen Thanh Van
When Vietnam opened up its housing market to foreigners in
July 2015, many thought there would be so many buyers rushing in to grab the
villas and apartments here.
But after a
year and a half since ownership restrictions were removed, it seems nothing
like that has happened.
Troy
Griffiths, deputy managing director of real estate company
Savills Vietnam, said that the relaxed rules make Vietnam as appealing as
Malaysia and Thailand, which have already taken similar initiative to drive
home sales to foreigners.
But the new policy, he said, has
not been doing much for the Vietnamese economy so far. “It’s not been anywhere
near as sensational as we all expected,” Griffiths toldVnExpress
International.
He estimated
that the number of sales has not reached thousands yet. His company has
reported less than a hundred sales, mostly in high-end products, and smaller
apartments to Taiwanese and Singaporeans.
There are
around 80,000 foreigners working and living in Vietnam. Before July 2015, each
of them could only buy one apartment here, under conditions that they were
either married to Vietnamese nationals, held managerial positions, or had
contributed to the country.
Industry
insiders believe that easing ownership restrictions have at least created more
interest in the local housing market. But many often complain that regulations
and paperwork in general are still very complicated for foreign buyers.
Griffiths
said that theoretically, there should be no regulatory problem with the new
policy.
He said it
is not easy to say for sure why the policy has not been a big success as
expected. But he said the country might need more time for the new rules to
work out, pointing out the case of Malaysia, which has implemented a similar
law for more than 10 years and has only seen 3,000 foreign buyers a year at
most.
Real estate was Vietnam’s best growing economic sector in2016 with 3,126 new companies in 2016, a
staggering 84 percent annual increase.
“It’s an
extremely competitive sector,” Griffiths said.
He said the
competition will continue in 2017 with a lot of supply coming on.
A report
released by Savills Vietnam on Monday showed strong growth in all asset classes in Ho Chi Minh City, the country’s most crowded city, in
the last quarter of 2016.
Tourism
boom, new public transport projects, and the current low rate of urban citizens
will be key drivers for Vietnam’s property market in 2017, it said.
More than
60,000 apartments are expected to enter the market in 2017 and 2018, with a
strong growth in the mid-end and affordable segments, the report said.
Only 34
percent of Vietnamese are living in urban areas, and according to Griffiths,
there’s a lot of room for residential development.
An
oversupply will be good for the competition, Griffiths said, dismissing
concerns of a bubble similar to the one that hit the market nearly a decade
ago. “The good developers will continue on and the poor ones will drop away,”
he said.
Source: Bao
Vnexpress
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