Bất động sản Sài Gòn có là món hời cho người Trung Quốc?

[không]

ko có cơ sở hạ tầng đi kèm,

tuyến metro xây mãi ko xong, phải lùi đến 2020, mà chưa chắc đúng hạn,

nợ công đã 61%, nếu nâng trần nợ công (trên 65%) thì cũng ko có nhiều "đất" để xoay xở, thặng dư tài khoản vãng lai hiện chỉ 2,7% GDP, trong khi tq là 10% từ cách đây hơn thập kỷ
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Ever since Vietnam allowed foreigners to own apartments in July 2015, its luxury housing sector has been on a tear. Three years ago, when local developer Dai Quang Minh launched the first residential complex in the Thu Thiem area – a 657 hectare grassy plot across the Saigon River from the central business district – the going rate was $2,000 to $2,800 per square meter. The Metropole, a nearby project slated for June, will likely cost more than twice as much, between $4,500 to $6,500 per square meter... (for Chinese investors used to sky-high prices at home, Vietnam's luxury apartments seem like a good deal. Earlier this year, China Vanke Co., the third largest developer on the mainland, launched a riverside project in Shanghai’s Pudong with units priced at more than $15,000 per square meter, more than double the Metropole project.)

...Back in 2006, apartments at riverfront locations in Shanghai’s Pudong district went for roughly $1,800 per square meter. In Ho Chi Minh city, you’re paying more for 20-year-old infrastructure. This market is getting too heated – and yet 80 percent of all buyers last year said they purchased for investment purposes. What gives?

Meanwhile, all of this is bad news for the Vietnamese. At this pace of foreign buying, Ho Chi Minh City is looking like it’s being colonized all over again.


Tags: china

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