Jump to content

Thai real estate market future is bright - packages for foreigners driving consumer confidence


webfact

Recommended Posts

I don't change their enthusiasm obviously...

 

One rule I wish they would drop is the requirement for foreigners to have the money sent from abroad to get a foreign exchange form. If you have the money here already, it would be great to be able to purchase a condo on the spot. Having to send the money abroad, send it back here with precise purpose while paying bank fees and exchange rate fees both ways over large sums of money is quite discouraging.

 

Case in point, you want to sell your condo here in order to purchase a new one. You have to go through all the nonsense I mentioned above.

 

I know foreigners with PR can already do that, I wish they extended the courtesy to everyone or at least to those with yearly visas. 

Edited by BKKTRAVELER
  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Seems like he is saying this to express his associations approval for this new government idea and this keep putting  pressure on them to continue to finalize these ideas.  But I don't think any idea like this will not bring in even a small fraction of 1 million who will buy 10 million condos. And 90% will be Chinese. 

Edited by Elkski
  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Elkski said:

But I don't think any idea like this will not bring in even a small fraction of 1 million who will buy 10 million condos. And 90% will be Chinese. 

The chineese are exactly why the thai property market could be optimistic. The speculators who are able to liquidate their chineese properties will have cash they want to get out of china. Thailand is an accessible market for those not well enough connected to be able to access western markets. Only time will tell if enough of them will be able to get out of their chineese properties and be able to get the cash offshore before the bottom falls out but the Thai market could benefit.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 hours ago, Tim207 said:

The chineese are exactly why the thai property market could be optimistic. The speculators who are able to liquidate their chineese properties will have cash they want to get out of china. Thailand is an accessible market for those not well enough connected to be able to access western markets. Only time will tell if enough of them will be able to get out of their chineese properties and be able to get the cash offshore before the bottom falls out but the Thai market could benefit.

meanwhile, in countries like Australia, there is concern that Chinese owners in Australia will be forced to sell up to cover their losses in China...  "speculators able to liquidate their properties".. and who will the buyers be ? - other speculators ?.. are you paid by the Chinese government ? then you have China's demographics.. where will all the new young Chinese come from who have money ?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 hours ago, milesinnz said:

meanwhile, in countries like Australia, there is concern that Chinese owners in Australia will be forced to sell up to cover their losses in China...  "speculators able to liquidate their properties".. and who will the buyers be ? - other speculators ?.. are you paid by the Chinese government ? then you have China's demographics.. where will all the new young Chinese come from who have money ?

People in Australia may think one way and people in Thailand may be thinking another. Only time will tell who is right and those two outcomes are not mutually exclusive.

 

Chinese property sales are way down but there are still plenty of sales happening. Some of those sellers will be ahead of the curve and not dump their profits into more chinese property. Those are the ones Thailand may be hoping to attract.

 

What does young chinese buyers and future demographics have to do with anything? The story and my post were about possible short term possibilities. Obviously the chinese property market will collapse, probably soon, but that doesn't mean everyone in china will be broke. There will be some that saw it coming before the others and some of those will want to get there money into assets outside of china before the whole economy falls apart.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

21 hours ago, webfact said:

Dr Wichai was principally referring to the situation in Bangkok and its surrounding provinces in the assessment. 

He went on to express surprise that the country extended beyond Bangkok and it's surrounding provinces, although he did admit to wondering occasionally where all the poor people went when their jobs had gone!

  • Like 1
  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

12 hours ago, milesinnz said:

meanwhile, in countries like Australia, there is concern that Chinese owners in Australia will be forced to sell up to cover their losses in China...  "speculators able to liquidate their properties".. and who will the buyers be ? - other speculators ?.. are you paid by the Chinese government ? then you have China's demographics.. where will all the new young Chinese come from who have money ?

When will other countries, particularly Western ones, realize that they are responsible for their own troubles. Their laws, their investment regulations, their immigration rules, their social engineering, their economic decisions, all have made them what they are today. Not China. China may have taken advantage of things. But whose fault was that? Now, housing bubbles across the world are going to be blamed on the Chinese? I don't know. Maybe Western and other governments should look at how China is handling Evergrande and their own property bubble. They're letting the air out slowly. Xi wants housing prices to come down. He and China needs it to come down. So does the rest of the world. And who would benefit in Thailand if property prices came down? Maybe average Thai people could own their own place? Xi is stiffing foreign creditors and paying domestic ones. Smart move. It just might work. Meanwhile, Wall Street bubbles, Bitbubble, Techbubble, housing bubble, debt bubble, all just keep on climbing. It's going to pop. And it will not be China's fault.

  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I remember around 2011 they eased the 49/51% rule in new condo development to attract buyers only to retract it later owners thought they had foreign quotas till they tried to sell.

not a problem now because they cant sell now unless they give it away.

I know more trying to sell than buy

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 10/11/2021 at 11:35 AM, webfact said:

But with vaccinations continuing apace and the end of lockdown this was now changing to a greater mood of confidence.

 

And it was being fuelled by the prospect of changes to rules to attract foreign buyers.

Seems unlikely.

Can't imagine any foreigner being that eager to buy in Thailand after COVID restrictions kept them out for the past two years. Buy a property then let it sit empty because Prayut and Anutin don't like 'dirty foreigners'.

Edited by BritManToo
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.







×
×
  • Create New...