Take care with a home away from home
24 July 2004
Buying a house overseas is easy - but make sure you do your
research.
For Australian investors wanting to dabble in overseas property
markets, a quick search on the web will bring up millions of
results.
France, Spain, England, the US, Hong Kong, or more exotic
locales such as the Caribbean or Bulgaria - there's hardly a
place in the world where one can't find on the internet a
property investment map.
So it's no great surprise that more Australians are actually
stepping out into the global property market, buying apartments,
houses and even commercial properties in other countries.
According to real estate agent L J Hooker, Australian investors
are snapping up properties overseas in growth markets such as
China, France, Italy and, closer to home, New Zealand. "A Sydney
couple was recently reported to have purchased a trendy
Argentinean apartment for just over $60,000, which could be
rented out for more than $390 a week, with an expected 70 per
cent occupancy," it says.
But experts warn that property investors who do venture offshore
need to be totally aware of the markets they are getting into,
with every country having its own laws governing the buying and
selling of properties, the obligations of landlords, and
different tax regimes. Also, consumers who buy property overseas
may have no protection under Australian law if something goes
wrong.
Michael Bula, a Melbourne-based lawyer specialising in
international property transactions, says there has been a
noticeable increase in the number of Australians buying overseas
properties, with information on other markets now much more
accessible. He agrees investors need to be careful and to seek
out professional advice. Bula says there are many more sites on
the internet but that there are also traps for young players.
He notes, for example, that there are major differences in law
between countries such as Australia and France. He points to
different conveyancing laws, tax laws and succession laws -- an
Australian will does not automatically apply in the case of a
deceased estate.
Repatriating profits can also be a problem.
"One has to be aware that if a person owns a property in France,
even though it may not generate any income, the investor is
still obliged to lodge a nil tax return," he says. "If you
don't, the tax office in France will deem it to be a secondary
property generating income and will estimate an income
equivalent to its value.
"The majority of people I see wouldn't be going into overseas
properties to live," he says. "They would be going there as an
investment. They might organise a syndicate and get a number of
people together and then time-share it or lease it out on
short-term rentals. The majority would be people looking for
some sort of return."
Bula says parts of France are quite affordable for Australians,
but investors should not expect huge capital gains and selling a
property can take months.
Jeff Kliger, managing partner of Melbourne law firm Kliger
Partners, says investing in overseas property is fraught with
dangers.
"You are totally in the hands of a series of agents and managers
to look after your property," he says. "It's not a place you can
drive by every day of the week and work out what is happening
with the particular property, the neighbourhood, what the
flavour of the market is.
"You need to find somebody who you can trust to advise and guide
you. You need to do a lot of homework."
Reproduced from The Australian newspaper, 24 July 2004.