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According to Goldman Sachs, the Olympics is a property goldmine that has boosted real estate prices in its host city in the past.1
Citing Sydney, Los Angeles, and Atlanta as prime examples, the Olympics generally translates into infrastructure development, tourism growth, and a stronger profile for the host city, and this has enticed many intrepid international property investors in the past.1
In fact, for Chinese buyers who are always on the lookout for prime investments, the Olympics is practically a gold standard investment opportunity beckoning them.
However, while the Rio Olympics has attracted the world’s attention, Chinese property investors are strangely not flocking over to both Rio de Janeiro and Brazil.
Indeed, even as Chinese interest over the Rio Olympics has been skyrocketing, Chinese buyer searches for Brazilian property remains on a steady decline.
Property search volume is a key predictive indicator for real estate demand, and Juwai’s purchasing intent index shows a steady decline in Chinese searches for Brazil over the past 12 months, with volumes down 58% y-o-y in July and at their lowest level for 18 months.2
This is even more surprising, given Brazil’s annual property yields is 5%3 and that infrastructure improvements resulting from the Olympics has driven a boom in public and private investment.
“Most Chinese property investors know very little about Brazil…so for Brazil to have its Olympic coming-out party at a time of upheaval and scandal is unfortunate,” shares Matthew Moore, President for the Americas at Juwai.com, with Forbes.
We delve into this trend, and share five fundamental factors that may offer essential and valuable insights into the Chinese buyer psyche:
The trends playing out in search volume for Brazilian real estate is contrasting sharply with the noticeable increase in Chinese buyers’ interest in Japanese real estate.
The Tokyo Olympics is proving a huge motivator for property investors from China, with search volumes for Japan up 191% in 2015 alone.2
Aside from the Tokyo Olympics as a pull factor, buyers are attracted by Japan’s reputation for safety, its stable political system, high lifestyle standards, extensive transport links with Mainland China via flights or ferry, and the fact that Japanese property was considered to be some 20% undervalued at the end of 2015, according to OECD estimates.
Interestingly, these pull factors are the exact contrast for the same reasons Chinese are turning away from Brazil, which goes to show how important these five motivations – safety, lifestyle wellbeing, connectivity convenience, stability, and currency exchange – are in influencing Chinese looking to buy overseas.
That said, beyond the Olympics, these five factors is applicable to any other city and country that is seeking to attract Chinese investment, especially emerging markets that may be a fresh alternative for Chinese buyers.
Read 9 things that Chinese consider when property hunting abroad.
So agents, don’t forget to boost your pitch by ensuring you feature the above factors into your pitch, and go for gold.
As for those marketing property in Brazil, all hope is not lost. With Brazil a popular summer destination offering an envious tropical lifestyle, Chinese investor interest may return in future, especially if Brazil can clean up their waterways to regain their offering of a healthy and natural living environment.
In the meantime, let’s sit back and enjoy the rest of the Rio Olympics.