in our county, 20%+ of the housing is idle, owned by out-of-state companies, some of whom pay property taxes and some dont.
I've seen this personally, too. A house I rented until a couple of years ago was owned by a Chinese company, which also owned half of the other houses on the block. We all paid rent to the same LLC that forwarded the cash overseas, and did almost zero maintenance.
I think the housing market is so fucked no one really grasps the scale of the problem.
One thing I don't see discusses very often is the affect that large "master-planned communities" have on a city's housing prices. I've seen at least three cities where mega developers like Howard Hughes Corp own massive tracts of land, but instead of building houses, sit on that land waiting for the price of housing to go up. Sometimes the developers are very open about it. Sometimes not. But instead of allowing a free market to develop 5,000 new homes, they develop one lot here and one lot there.
Or worse — I've seen them build hundreds of homes and then sit on them, empty and vacant, waiting for prices to climb high enough to put the houses on the market. Again, a drip at a time, to keep the housing supply artificially small so they can boost their profits. Meanwhile, people have nowhere to live.
I don't understand why the US does not push back on Chinese ownership of property. From what I understand, there are so many restrictions of owning land in China as a foreigner:
1. The property must be residential
2. If the property is commercial, a foreigner must incorporate in China
3. You may own only one property
4. You must possess a long-term visa
5. You cannot be a landlord, as a foreigner
6. You must pay a 1% deposit and an initial 30% of the purchase price to the seller in RMB, if you are obtaining a mortgage
I think there needs to be a campaign to educate the US population on how lopsided the system is. Only then will politicians start to get massive heat to enact at least equivalent restrictions. Right now its all the rich and foreigners picking away at the carcass that is America.
I've seen this personally, too. A house I rented until a couple of years ago was owned by a Chinese company, which also owned half of the other houses on the block. We all paid rent to the same LLC that forwarded the cash overseas, and did almost zero maintenance.
I think the housing market is so fucked no one really grasps the scale of the problem.
One thing I don't see discusses very often is the affect that large "master-planned communities" have on a city's housing prices. I've seen at least three cities where mega developers like Howard Hughes Corp own massive tracts of land, but instead of building houses, sit on that land waiting for the price of housing to go up. Sometimes the developers are very open about it. Sometimes not. But instead of allowing a free market to develop 5,000 new homes, they develop one lot here and one lot there.
Or worse — I've seen them build hundreds of homes and then sit on them, empty and vacant, waiting for prices to climb high enough to put the houses on the market. Again, a drip at a time, to keep the housing supply artificially small so they can boost their profits. Meanwhile, people have nowhere to live.