Skip to main content

Why Miami Offers Attractive Opportunities to Chinese Investors

Albert E. Dotson, Jr.

More so than ever, wealthy Chinese investors are actively seeking returns abroad when it comes to real estate investments. China’s 2014 GDP growth of 7.4% was the slowest since 1990 and China’s growth outlook is gloomy due to its impending real estate bubble. Chinese developers have demonstrated in the past few years that they are not afraid to undertake large projects on foreign soil.

In 2013,  Chinese commercial developer, ABP China (Holding), entered into a £1 billion deal to transform a 35-acre site at Royal Albert Dock in London into a business district that would serve as a gateway for Asian and Chinese business into Europe. Also in 2013, China Vanke Company, partnered with Tishman Speyer to build San Francisco’s second tallest residential tower. In December 2014, Shanghai-based Greenland Group partnered with Forest City Ratners Construction to commence construction of a $5 billion development near the Barclays Center in downtown Brooklyn, New York, which will comprise of 14 residential buildings and eight acres of green space.

As Miami continues to grow and gain international recognition as a top tier city, both as a significant financial trading center and a world-class travel destination, it has much appeal to the Chinese. With its attractive coastal location and tropical weather,  the city also offers the kind of affordable ultra-luxury residential housing that is interesting to cash-rich, high-net worth Chinese buyers. The 4Q 2014 Douglas Elliman Real Estate Market Report shows an average housing cost of $240 per square-foot for Miami Coastal and Mainland and $651 per square-foot for Miami Beach/Barrier Islands. By way of comparison, residential homes in Shanghai and Beijing’s prime areas can easily run $1,600 – $1,800 per square foot.  Miami’s active state of growth signals large potential for appreciation and return on investment.

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE
New Miami Blog February 19, 2016
American investors have made their way into Cuba. Just this week, the U.S. Treasury Department has approved the first significant U.S. business investment in Cuba since 1959: the Oggun tractor factory. This plant represents a $5 million to $10 million investment by an American company in Cuba. Both ...
Speaking Engagement February 16, 2024
Shawn P. Wolf serves as a panelist on the panel titled Multijurisdictional Ethics Issues - Working with Inbound Investors & Businesses - Some Things You May Not Think About May Hurt You at the 11th Annual Florida Tax Institute Conference. The panel discusses matters practitioners representing in...
Client Alert February 6, 2024
On February 1, 2024, the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit ruled on a motion for an injunction pending appeal in Shen v. Simpson. This is the federal challenge to Florida’s new law (SB 264) that restricts certain individuals from China and other “foreign countries o...
VIEW MORE