Posts Tagged ‘foreign investors’

Foreign Investors Blocked From Investing in U.S. Commercial Real Estate

Wednesday, October 6th, 2010

Foreign investors blocked from investing in U.S. by taxes. Although foreign investment in United States commercial real estate doubled in the 1st half of 2010 compared with 2009, activity is still sluggish, thanks to the slow economy and a lack of trophy properties offered for sale.  Currently, the United Kingdom is the hottest international destination for investment, according to Jones Lang LaSalle research.  So far this year, $7 billion of foreign money has been invested in British properties, compared with just $4.3 billion in U.S. real estate.

“The rise in cross-border transaction volume also shows a real estate return in the major markets, and an encouraging 176 percent increase year over year in the United States, which  had the greatest fall in cross-border investment during the downturn,” said Steve Collins, managing director, Americas, for Jones Lang LaSalle’s International Capital Group.  “Demand is especially robust for well-leased, core-style product in gateway markets such as New York and Washington, D.C., whereas demand remains much weaker for the non-gateway cities markets.”

Another obstacle to foreign ownership of American real estate is the 1986 Foreign Investment in Real Estate Property Tax Act (FIRPTA), which gives the government the ability to tax gains earned when an overseas company sells a property.  Opponents say that law blocks the flow of foreign capital into the United States; an attempt to overhaul FIRPTA this summer failed in Congress.  Representative Joseph Crowley (D-NY) has introduced legislation that will increase the percentage of foreign ownership in publicly traded REITs from five to 10 percent before proceeds are taxed under FIRPTA.  Although the legislation passed the House by a wide margin, the Senate has not yet acted on it.

“It’s certainly not what we hoped for.  It’s really just a start,” said Jim Fetgatter, CEO of the Association of Foreign Investors in Real Estate (AFIRE), “It may encourage a little foreign investment, but it’s only going to impact foreign investors who are already investing in REITs, allow them to take a bigger piece of a company.  But there are a lot of countries in the Middle East and Germany that don’t invest in REITs.  They’re direct investors and the new law won’t have any impact on them.”

Back to the Futures? Not Just Yet. Investors Still Spooked by Derivatives

Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009

It’s no surprise that investors are still wary of investing in derivatives, given the financial devastation that these vehicles’ collapse caused last year.  Proof of the fact is that the IPO of a financial instrument designed to be on American home prices failed because its auction did not generate adequate investor interest.51916680SC005_NYSE

According to its Securities and Exchange Commission filing, MacroMarkets turned down all auction bids because there was an “insufficient demand for an equal number of Down and Up shares”.  In other words, MacroMarkets was forced to abandon the auction process because the offering would work only if there was an equal number of shares in both the “up” and the “down” trusts – and if each pair of shares totaled $50.  The firm had initially set a minimum closing investment pool of $125 million, though CEO Sam Masucci did not disclose the value of the bids received before pulling the plug.

MacroMarkets sought out investment from homebuilders and banks who want to hedge their housing exposure, as well as foreign investors seeking a stake in U.S. real estate.  The problem is that investors had difficulty valuing the shares because it meant predicting the movement of the 10-city index on which the offering was based.  That’s not easy in a housing market where prices may not have bottomed out yet.

When housing trusts eventually restart, their shares will trade under the symbols UMM for “up” and DMM for “down” on the NYSE Arca, the New York Stock Exchange’s all-electronic U.S. trading platform.