Australia widens probe into illegal home buying by foreigners, including Chinese
Officials look at whether purchases by overseas buyers, including some from China, broke rules
PUBLISHED : Wednesday, 10 June, 2015, 2:40am
UPDATED : Wednesday, 10 June, 2015, 2:40am
Agence France-Presse in Sydney
Mainland buyers are snapping up residential properties in Sydney, such as Altona (above), which was bought by a Chinese investor. Photo: AFP
Australian Treasurer Joe Hockey has widened a probe into the illegal buying of residential property by foreigners, with almost 200 sales being investigated for breaching investment rules.
Prices of residential real estate in some of Australia's biggest cities, such as Sydney and Melbourne, have soared in recent years, with concerns growing that cashed-up foreigners, particularly from China, have helped inflate the market.
"The Australian Taxation Office is using all the resources of government to fully investigate any suggestions that come forward that a foreign person has unlawfully purchased real estate in Australia," Hockey said, with 60 officials on the case.
"This is the tip of the iceberg. The data-matching powers of the Australian Taxation Office are formidable. And they will give us the power to look right across the system."
The government announced a crackdown on illegal purchases earlier this year and said it would rigorously enforce rules under which foreigners are only allowed to buy new dwellings, and not existing residential property.
Hockey created headlines in March by issuing a divestment order on a luxury Sydney mansion worth A$39 million (HK$233 million) bought illegally under foreign investment rules by China's Evergrande Real Estate Group. It has since been sold.
He said last month that some 100 cases of illegal purchases were being probed, which has now spiralled to almost 200.
The treasurer added that the widening inquiry spanned the breadth of the market, from properties valued at A$300,000 to more than A$40 million.
In one case, an overseas buyer was being investigated for owning 10 homes in two states.
Last week, Australia's opposition leader Bill Shorten said it was "absolutely deplorable" that a Chinese property developer could conceal an investment in one of Sydney's most famous homes to dodge federal laws.
An investigation by Fairfax Media found Wang Zhijun, who was not a permanent resident when he paid A$52 million for Point Piper mansion Altona in 2013, allegedly hid his interest behind distant relatives from Melbourne to avoid foreign investment laws.
Foreign investors who have bought illegally have a moratorium until December 1 to come forward, with Hockey adding 24 of the cases being examined involved voluntary disclosures by buyers.
Sydney residential real estate prices jumped by 15 per cent in the year to May 31, with a median value of A$752,000, according to figures from CoreLogic-RP Data.
Melbourne home prices have soared by 9 per cent during the same period to a median of A$569,500, the data showed.