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Chinese Property Investors Widen Footprint in U.S.

Photo from Grand China Fund Grand China Fund owns a stake in this Atlanta residential complex. SHANGHAI—The upswing in the U.S. property market is attracting Chinese developers and investment firms, and they are dipping their toes into new cities. While Chinese institutional investors are still drawn to their traditional favorites of New York, Los Angeles and San Francisco, many are now also headed to cities such as Houston, Boston and Seattle as they seek geographic diversity as well as bigger lot sizes. These other cities—lesser known to some Chinese firms—now appear to offer fresh opportunities as energy or technology drives their economies and local Chinese communities expand. In the second quarter of this year, Beijing-based real-estate investment firm Grand China Fund took an 80% stake in a 286-unit residential rental complex in Houston. That followed a 2012 investment in a 170-unit residential project in Atlanta, with another local partner. The firm put a total of about $15 million into the two projects, which are valued at more than $50 million. For both projects, it said it was attracted by the prospect of higher yields amid the lower prices compared with property in California and New York. Gaw Capital Partners, a Hong Kong-based private-equity firm, is planning to raise $500 million for a real-estate fund that will invest in U.S. commercial property in the fourth quarter, targeting investors from Asia and North America. The fund manager said it will look at assets in “innovation centers” such as Portland, Ore., and Austin, Texas. China Vanke Co., 000002.SZ -2.23% the country’s largest property developer by market capitalization, is interested in investing in Boston, partly because of its sizable Chinese community, said the firm’s president, Yu Liang, at a news briefing in Hong Kong last month, without providing further details. Vanke had already jointly invested in a 655-unit high-end condominium in San Francisco with U.S. developer Tishman Speyer earlier this year. Chinese investors still are eyeing assets in New York and San Francisco, “but we are also witnessing increased interest in cities like Washington, D.C., Boston, Houston, Seattle and Chicago,” said Alistair Meadows, who oversees cross-border Asian-Pacific real-estate transactions at consultancy Jones Lang LaSalle JLL -1.20% . “Cities like Seattle and Houston are enjoying strong job growth driven by the technology and energy sectors. As a consequence, core office investments in these cities offering higher yields are proving attractive.” Slower domestic economic growth in China as well as rising risks in the country’s financial sector are prompting investors to look abroad. The U.S. has become the most popular real-estate market to invest in so far this year for Chinese firms, followed by Hong Kong, the U.K., Macau and Singapore, according to data tracker Dealogic. Chinese property investors—from big players like sovereign-wealth funds and insurers to smaller ones such as local fund managers—are attracted to the U.S. market in general because of the economic recovery, ample market liquidity, and the stability of returns, real-estate consultants say. Rental properties in the U.S. typically have longer leases compared with China’s, and hence are less prone to disruptions or volatility. Tishman Speyer China Vanke invested in a condo project in San Francisco earlier this year. Acknowledging that Houston and Atlanta aren’t usually the first places Chinese investors think of when investing in the U.S., Zhang Mingeng, board chairman at Beijing’s Grand China Fund, cites costs as a key attraction. He said prices of some projects in these areas are still down around 20% from their peaks, and that growth prospects in these cities are positive. “Our investors, which include lawyers, exporters, merchants, accountants, have U.S. incomes and want us to branch into the U.S. for diversification,” Mr. Zhang said. “They are looking for safe assets that they can see and touch.” Grand China Fund manages yuan-denominated funds totaling four billion yuan ($653 million) investing in Chinese real estate, and a $60 million dollar-denominated fund investing in the U.S. Houston, in particular, has become more familiar to Chinese investors. China Petrochemical Corp., known as Sinopec, has operations there, and the city gained recognition with Chinese investors with the help of former Chinese basketball star Yao Ming, who played for the Houston Rockets. Mr. Zhang said he is looking for more real-estate projects in Miami, Orlando, Dallas and San Diego, in addition to New York and Chicago. “While the returns from the U.S. are not as high as what we get in our mainland China projects, they are good enough,” he said, declining to reveal the investment yield of his U.S. projects. “We like residential projects near universities, hospitals and military bases.” Asset managers said investors who aren’t eager to place all their eggs in one basket are looking for diversity, not just in asset classes, but also in their geographic footprint. “The large Asian institutional investors, including Chinese investors, are looking for safety, more stability and exposure to diversified currencies and returns,” said Goodwin Gaw, chairman of Gaw Capital Partners, which also provides outbound-investment advisory services to Asian institutional investors. To be sure, foreign investment in the U.S. still makes up a small portion of the market. Around 15% of the $25 billion invested in New York’s real-estate market in 2012 was from foreign investors, for instance, compared with 75% of the $24 billion invested in London in 2012, according to data from Jones Lang LaSalle. Not all Chinese investors are branching out. The coastal cities in the U.S. still attract plenty of Chinese investors, with deals this year such as Greenland Holdings Group’s $1 billion investment in a mixed-use project in downtown Los Angeles, and Soho China Ltd. Chief Executive Zhang Xin ‘s personal investment in a stake in the General Motors Building in New York, which attracted considerable media attention in China. Beijing-based property developer and investor Feng Lun, chairman of Vantone Holdings Co., said he is sticking to investing in New York City. Vantone has leased 20,000 square meters of space in One World Trade Center, and has invested in joint ventures in two residential projects in the city. “We’ll focus on New York City, preferably Manhattan, to ensure our current operations are successful before branching to other cities,” Mr. Feng said. Write to Esther Fung at esther.fung@dowjones.com A version of this article appeared September 25, 2013, on page C8 in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: China Casts a Wider Net Over U.S. Market. Continue reading

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Asian Currencies Have Best Weekly Gain in a Year on Fed Decision

By Lilian Karunungan & Yumi Teso – Sep 20, 2013 Asian currencies rallied this week by the most in a year after the Federal Reserve unexpectedly maintained monetary stimulus that’s led to capital inflows to emerging-market assets. Malaysia’s ringgit and Thailand’s baht led the advance after Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said Sept. 18 more evidence of a recovery in the world’s largest economy is needed before the central bank starts paring its $85 billion a month of bond purchases. Global funds bought $494 million more stocks than they sold in the first four days of the week in Indonesia, the Philippines and Thailand. Enlarge image The Malaysian currency is headed for its best weekly gain since the 1998 Asian financial crisis, helping the FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI Index of shares to climb 1.4 percent this week. Photographer: Sanjit Das/Bloomberg “Investors reversed positions built up across the board on speculation about the stimulus reduction,” said Tohru Nishihama, an economist covering emerging markets at Dai-ichi Life Research Institute Inc. in Tokyo. “But the Fed will eventually trim stimulus, and investors will become more selective. The long-term trend of gradual dollar appreciation may remain intact.” The Bloomberg-JPMorgan Asia Dollar Index , which tracks the region’s 10 most-active currencies excluding the yen, climbed 0.8 percent during the five days to 116.14 as of 5:20 p.m. in Singapore, the most since the period ended Sept. 14, 2012. The ringgit strengthened 4 percent this week to 3.1650 per dollar in Kuala Lumpur , according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The Thai baht appreciated 2.9 percent to 30.96 and the Indonesian rupiah rallied 0.5 percent to 11,350. Bernanke Concern The Federal Open Market Committee is concerned that the rapid tightening of financial conditions in recent months could damp growth, Bernanke said at a press conference in Washington on Sept. 18. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg were predicting a cut of $5 billion in the Fed’s monthly bond buying. The Malaysian currency posted its biggest weekly gain since the 1998 Asian financial crisis, helping the FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI Index of shares climb 1.8 percent. The U.S. is Malaysia’s fourth-largest overseas market. Shipments rose in July after a five-month contraction. “We are building up our portfolio to come back to a long position on emerging currencies versus the dollar,” said Philippe Jauer, chief investment officer for global fixed income and currencies in Singapore at Amundi, which oversees about $1 trillion, said in an e-mail interview yesterday. “The Philippines, Malaysia and Thailand are the first countries any investor should come back to because the economic fundamentals are much better than in India and Indonesia.” RBI Policy The Reserve Bank of India unexpectedly raised its benchmark repurchase rate by a quarter percentage point to 7.5 percent today, the first increase since 2011. Governor Raghuram Rajan , who took office two weeks ago, is seeking to rein in inflation that’s hurting the poor and dimming economic prospects. The rupee dropped 0.6 percent to 62.1387 in Mumbai, trimming the week’s gain to 2.2 percent. It reached 61.6450 yesterday, the strongest level since Aug. 16, as markets reacted to the Fed decision. The S&P BSE Sensex Index of shares fell 2 percent, after climbing 4.6 percent in the previous four days. The rupee and Indonesia’s rupiah are the worst-performing Asian currencies this year after the yen, with losses of 12 percent and 15 percent, respectively, as investors fled nations with worsening current-account deficits. “Asian currencies’ strength this week has a lot to do with the Fed’s decision not to taper quantitative easing,” said Nizam Idris , the head of fixed income and currency strategy at Macquarie Bank Ltd. in Singapore. “It gives countries with worsening current accounts more time to get their houses in order.” Elsewhere in Asia, the Philippine peso rose 1.9 percent this week to 43.037 per dollar. Vietnam’s dong traded at 21,115, unchanged from the end of last week. South Korea’s markets are shut for three days from Sept. 18 for public holidays, while China and Taiwan are closed for two days from Sept. 19. Hong Kong also has a public holiday today. To contact the reporters on this story: Lilian Karunungan in Singapore at lkarunungan@bloomberg.net ; Yumi Teso in Bangkok at yteso1@bloomberg.net To contact the editor responsible for this story: James Regan at jregan19@bloomberg.net Continue reading

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Real estate business in DUBAI increasing

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