Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A Chinese-American family bought my first house in NoVa when we decided to move, and I'm praying another Asian family will materialize when we decide to sell our second and retire. Most work very hard and provide liquidity to the market.
This is a very odd comment. No one is talking about Chinese American families. The issue is non-resident people buying as an offshore investment from their own countries.
I had 12 offers on my house, including a cash offer we turned down. I don't know or care the ethnicity of the people making the offers (although the ultimate buyers turned out to be white) so I did not have to pray for a buyer if a certain ethnicity.
Anonymous wrote:Interesting though. The US is one of a few countries in the world that allows foreign nationals to buy real estate as a matter of right. An American certainly could not go to China and buy property as a matter of right. A lot of the most valuable assests in this country are owned by foreign nationals. You have to wonder about the long term implications.
Anonymous wrote:Some are here for university studies or working as scientists doing science (NIST and NIH has many foreign nationals working there) because they have wealthy parents back at home. They dish out the cash for their kids to buy expensive homes, cars and gadgets. If you are a permanent status, then you can buy a house. Chinese are not the only ones. I see the Russians do it often too in the area. So do the Latin Americans but they can afford only parts of the county. And I observed they mostly do their own renovations to expand the house to have more families live with them causing overcrowding.
Anonymous wrote:y bought a couple of houses in the same exclusive gated community so he could live in the same neighborhood as his cousins who were all college age. The parents stayed in the home country and hired maid, food prep and lawn services for the kids. They all drove expensive cars, too. Also knew someone whose family bought a house in a foreign country friendly with the US so they would have an easier time getting student VISAs and citizenship for the kids when it came time for college. And there are people who buy to establish residency and/or to send their kids to elite high schools and then they go onto the Ivies. If they have that much money, why don't they just improve their educational system so their kids can be educated there and help their own country?[/quote]
Because money decides where it wants to go, and it doesn't need your opinion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In 2013, for instance, a Hong Kong woman paid $6.5 million for a two-bedroom in the tallest residence in New York, One57, for her daughter so she’ll have somewhere to live when she gets into Columbia, Harvard or NYU, she told her agent. The daughter, currently, is 2 years old
Know someone whose family bought a couple of houses in the same exclusive gated community so he could live in the same neighborhood as his cousins who were all college age. The parents stayed in the home country and hired maid, food prep and lawn services for the kids. They all drove expensive cars, too. Also knew someone whose family bought a house in a foreign country friendly with the US so they would have an easier time getting student VISAs and citizenship for the kids when it came time for college. And there are people who buy to establish residency and/or to send their kids to elite high schools and then they go onto the Ivies. If they have that much money, why don't they just improve their educational system so their kids can be educated there and help their own country?
Anonymous wrote:Some are here for university studies or working as scientists doing science (NIST and NIH has many foreign nationals working there) because they have wealthy parents back at home. They dish out the cash for their kids to buy expensive homes, cars and gadgets. If you are a permanent status, then you can buy a house. Chinese are not the only ones. I see the Russians do it often too in the area. So do the Latin Americans but they can afford only parts of the county. And I observed they mostly do their own renovations to expand the house to have more families live with them causing overcrowding.
Anonymous wrote:A Chinese-American family bought my first house in NoVa when we decided to move, and I'm praying another Asian family will materialize when we decide to sell our second and retire. Most work very hard and provide liquidity to the market.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In 2013, for instance, a Hong Kong woman paid $6.5 million for a two-bedroom in the tallest residence in New York, One57, for her daughter so she’ll have somewhere to live when she gets into Columbia, Harvard or NYU, she told her agent. The daughter, currently, is 2 years old
Know someone whose family bought a couple of houses in the same exclusive gated community so he could live in the same neighborhood as his cousins who were all college age. The parents stayed in the home country and hired maid, food prep and lawn services for the kids. They all drove expensive cars, too. Also knew someone whose family bought a house in a foreign country friendly with the US so they would have an easier time getting student VISAs and citizenship for the kids when it came time for college. And there are people who buy to establish residency and/or to send their kids to elite high schools and then they go onto the Ivies. If they have that much money, why don't they just improve their educational system so their kids can be educated there and help their own country?
So wait, we want don't want the affluent legalimmigrants coming to the US? That doesn't make any sense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh good! I need to sell my house and move to Florida!
Saw a ton of shuttered beach front condos in Florida and no hurricanes to speak of...I wondered if their owners were offshore investors...