Rich, Young “Fuerdai” Chinese Are Buying Overseas Properties on Their Smartphones – WSJ

The truth is that for all of the tough talk from Li Xinping about stopping the massive outflows of capital from China, some of it probably dark money obtained from dubious enterprises and kickbacks, nothing has changed in China or in the Western cities eager to share in the wealth. Rich, Young “Fuerdai” Chinese Are Buying Overseas Properties on Their Smartphones. Millennials acquire real estate in other countries as hedge against a weakening currency, homes for their own children when they study abroad


The truth is that for all of the tough talk from Li Xinping about stopping the massive outflows of capital from China, some of it probably dark money obtained from dubious enterprises and kickbacks, nothing has changed in China or in the Western cities eager to share in the wealth.

Rich, Young “Fuerdai” Chinese Are Buying Overseas Properties on Their Smartphones

Millennials acquire real estate in other countries as hedge against a weakening currency, homes for their own children when they study abroad

An increasingly larger group of Chinese millennials are looking to buy property abroad. Above, a potential buyer inspects a house for sale in Australia.

An increasingly larger group of Chinese millennials are looking to buy property abroad. Above, a potential buyer inspects a house for sale in Australia.

BEIJING— Zheng Xiaohei, a marketer from Urumqi in western China, made his first overseas property investment without so much as a visit.

Mr. Zheng, 29 years old, in March purchased a studio apartment in Thailand for about 650,000 yuan ($94,255) using his smartphone and an app called Uoolu that connects users to overseas property listings.

“Investing in overseas real estate was mainly due to my good impression of Thailand,” Mr. Zheng said.

Founded two years ago, Beijing-based Uoolu is focused on tapping a specific group of home buyers: Chinese millennials looking for foreign properties.

About 70% of Chinese millennials, those born between 1981 and 1998, own a home, the highest share of respondents from nine countries and regions who were surveyed in a recent HSBC study. Chinese parents often register home purchases under their child’s name to prepare the child for marriage and raising a family, which likely boosts the percentage.

Still, a growing sliver of Chinese millennials are looking to buy property abroad. Kevin Lee, chief operating officer of Beijing-based consulting firm Youthology, put the percentage in the low single digits but said it would continue to increase.

The lure? A millennial’s desire to hedge against yuan depreciation and find affordable homes in cities with cleaner air for their children to live in when they study abroad. In the past year, home prices have soared to more than 30 times household income in major Chinese cities.

Uoolu said about 80% of its monthly active users are between the ages of 20 and 39, and that 20,000 customers have bought or are in the process of purchasing overseas property. A similar real-estate platform, Juwai.com, estimates that roughly 30% to 40% of its buyers are millennials.

Cherubic Ventures, a venture-capital firm with offices in Beijing and San Francisco, invested an undisclosed sum in Uoolu. One selling point, said the firm’s founder, Matt Cheng, was Uoolu’s target of reaching young Chinese buyers who are tech savvy and interested in cross-border investments, “but don’t know where to begin.”

Overseas investing isn’t easy at a time when the Chinese government is clamping down on capital flight amid concerns about a weakening currency. Chinese citizens aren’t allowed to transfer more than $50,000 a year out of the country or use those funds to buy overseas property.

However, this increased government scrutiny is “slowing but not cutting off” the surge of investment in U.S. property, said Arthur Margon, partner at Rosen Consulting Group.

“The more the government limits people, the more they want to invest overseas,” said Wang Hao, Uoolu’s 33-year-old chief operating officer.

People often skirt the foreign-exchange rules by, for example, pooling money among family members and friends and separately sending it into overseas bank accounts. Also, Chinese citizens who have studied or worked abroad for a few years might already have bank accounts in other countries and those overseas funds are beyond the Chinese government’s control.

Alan Wang, a 19-year-old college student in Toronto who comes from Shenzhen, said he opened a bank account in Canada for education expenses. Now it is useful for buying property, too. He and his family are thinking about purchasing a home on a budget of about 1 million Canadian dollars (US$730,600) this summer. To do so, he will have relatives send money to his bank account, he said.

Uoolu helps buyers open bank accounts in other countries and apply for mortgages there. Users pay a deposit to reserve the right to purchase a home. The money is sent directly from a buyer’s bank account to the overseas developer—Uoolu says it doesn’t handle the cross-border transaction within the mobile app.

Chris Daish, a real-estate agent at Triplemint in New York, said one of his Chinese clients, an accountant in her mid-20s who works in New York, earlier this year pooled $110,000 from five family members to help buy her a condo in the city.

“It’s a really arduous task even to get a couple hundred grand out,” said Mr. Daish, who emphasized that he doesn’t help clients with money transfers.

A 28-year-old who works in finance in Beijing in February bought two apartments in Bangkok for a total of 5 million yuan ($725,000), one for a vacation home and the other for rental income. She declined to disclose her name out of fear of government retaliation for violating capital controls.

As for some of her friends, she said, “They wish to buy but dare not.”

Source: Rich, Young Chinese Are Buying Overseas Properties on Their Smartphones – WSJ

China warns Trump against abandoning climate change deal

We are now seeing the first indications of the consequences of a Trump withdrawal from the international community. China has seen an opportunity to displace the United States and to advance China’s own aspirations to take a more aggressive and visible leadership role in the COP21 agreement. The simultaneous announcement of the de facto death of the TransPacific Partnership (TPP) has also opened a new opportunity for Chinese hegemony in the Asian economic and geopolitical world. Regardless of the Trumpist views on climate change and foreign trade, we are proverbially cutting off our noses to spite our faces.


  “Climate change is not, as rumored, a hoax created by the Chinese.” — Liu Zhenmin, China’s deputy minister of foreign affairs

China likely to fill climate change global leadership void on U.S. departure

We are now seeing the first indications of the consequences of  a Trump withdrawal from the international community. China has seen an opportunity to displace the United States and to advance China’s own aspirations to take a more aggressive and visible leadership role in the COP21 agreement. The simultaneous announcement of the de facto death of the TransPacific Partnership (TPP) has also opened a new opportunity for Chinese hegemony in the Asian economic and geopolitical world. Regardless of the Trumpist views on climate change and foreign trade, we are proverbially cutting off our noses to spite our faces.

Source: China warns Trump against abandoning climate change deal

Beijing pushes for progress to prevent global warming, saying that the world wants to co-operate

Delegates at the international climate conference in Marrakesh

China has warned Donald Trump that he will be defying the wishes of the entire planet if he acts on his vow to back away from the Paris climate agreement after he becomes US president next January.  In a sign of how far the world has shifted in recognizing the need to tackle global warming, Beijing — once seen as an obstructive force in UN climate talks — is now leading the push for progress by responding to fears that Mr. Trump would pull the US out of the landmark accord.

“It is global society’s will that all want to co-operate to combat climate change,” a senior Beijing negotiator said in Marrakesh on Friday, at the first round of UN talks since the Paris deal was sealed last December. The Chinese negotiators added that “any movement by the new US government” would not affect their transition towards becoming a greener economy.

India also joined in the warnings, saying Mr. Trump’s appointment would force countries to reassess an accord hailed as an end to the fossil fuel era.

“Everyone will rethink how this whole process is going to unfold,” India’s chief negotiator, Ravi Prasad, told the Financial Times.

Recalling the way support for the earlier Kyoto protocol climate treaty crumbled after it was abandoned by another Republican president, George W Bush, Mr. Prasad said he feared the Paris accord could suffer “a contagious disease that spreads” if the US withdrew.

Mr. Trump’s sweeping victory on Tuesday has shaken what had appeared to be an unstoppable bout of global action to tackle climate change in the run-up to the two-week Marrakesh talks, which began on Monday.

Governments struck the first climate deal for aviation in October, just days before agreeing to phase out planet-warming hydrofluorocarbon chemicals used in air-conditioners.

The Moroccan hosts of this week’s talks had been planning a celebratory meeting to cap this unprecedented bout of activity. Instead, organizers awoke on Wednesday morning to find the world’s wealthiest country had a president-elect who has called global warming a hoax, pledged to “cancel” the Paris agreement and vowed to stop US funding of UN climate programs entirely.

“They were in absolute shock,” said one person who saw Moroccan officials on Wednesday morning.

Adnan Amin, the director-general of the International Renewable Energy Agency, said “a sense of helplessness” had pervaded the Marrakesh talks, and “a certain amount of fear”.

The EU and Japan also reaffirmed their commitment to the agreement, which requires all countries to come up with a plan to curb climate change in order to stop global temperatures from rising more than 2C from pre-industrial times.

But neither they nor China were willing to offer extra cuts in greenhouse gas emissions to fill the vacuum a US withdrawal would create, nor additional money for an agreement requiring billions of dollars in public and private funds to be channeled from rich to poor countries to tackle climate change.

At 3am in the morning I started to hear the [US election] results and I said, ‘No, you’re having a nightmare, go back to sleep’. When I got up and realised it was true, I walked around in a daze

“If the US changes its position that would be very serious for us, especially the aspect of the finance,” said Shigeru Ushio, a Japanese foreign ministry official.

As delegates absorbed the ramifications of Mr. Trump’s sweeping victory, many swapped stories of how the result had hit them.

“At 3am in the morning I started to hear the results and I said, ‘No, you’re having a nightmare, go back to sleep’,” said one developing country participant. “When I got up and realized it was true, this was really, really happening, I walked around in a daze. I think a lot of us were.”

The negotiations have continued nonetheless and some countries have been adamant that the US election result should not interfere with a meeting that is due to start negotiating a raft of important rules for how the Paris agreement will operate.

“We’re talking about the big challenge of climate change,” said Russia’s lead negotiator, Oleg Shamanov. “This issue is bigger than life. This is a long-term issue, longer than any mandate of any president of country X or Z, even if that country is a big one.”

The prospect of the US withdrawing from the Paris agreement has been a topic of endless discussion beneath the sun-shaded walkways in the temporary convention center built for the Marrakesh meeting.

A pullout would take four years unless Mr. Trump chose to take the US out of the accord’s parent treaty, the 1992 UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, in which case it could only take a year.

That would be a highly provocative move, said international climate law expert, Farhana Yamin. “It would escalate non-cooperation to the highest level possible.”

But as the first week of the talks drew to a close, a mood of defiance was emerging among some delegates who said past US retreats from UN climate action had only spurred other countries’ determination to unify and proceed.

“The talk in the corridors is, ‘OK, this is not going to stop us from moving forward, we will just redouble our efforts’,” said Hugh Sealy, a lead negotiator for an alliance of small island countries.

“This is still an existential threat,” he said. “I still want to pass on that little house I have on the coast in Grenada to my children and the rest of us are going to have to step up.”

Something Is Rotten In Canada: Chinese Real-Estate Fraud On A Global Scale

In the last three days, both The Globe & Mail and CBC News have published disturbing stories about the scale of the Chinese infiltration of the Vancouver housing market that go well beyond anything understood or encompassed by BC government or federal government action on the problem. The CBC reported that at least $13.5 Million in cash has been confiscated from Chinese recently entering Canada at Vancouver International Airport. The following story, reblogged from The Globe & Mail, tells a tale of fraud, manipulation, and tax evasion on a massive scale. It also tells an embarrassing tale of gross incompetence by Canadian authorities. All of this is consistent with other investigative journalists reports from the United States on other similar fraudulent Chinese real-estate activities. Some of these reports go back years. The original Mossack Fonseca “Panama Papers” revelations that indicated that many of the Chinese elite with family links to Li Xinping, and The People’s Liberation Army had Mossack Fonseca accounts should have been a red flag for Canada, but was not. We are living in an entirely new global economy manipulated by dark forces. What will we do now that Vancouver has been ruined for decades to come?


What Will We Do Now That Canada Has Been Ruined For Decades?

 In the last three days, both The Globe & Mail and CBC News have published disturbing stories about the scale of the Chinese infiltration of the Vancouver housing market that go well beyond anything understood or encompassed by BC government or federal government action on the problem.  The CBC reported that at least $13.5 Million in cash has been confiscated from Chinese recently entering Canada at Vancouver International Airport.  The following story, reblogged from The Globe & Mail, tells a tale of fraud, manipulation, and tax evasion on a massive scale. It also tells an embarrassing tale of gross incompetence by Canadian authorities. All of this is consistent with other investigative journalists reports from the United States on other similar fraudulent Chinese real-estate activities. Some of these reports go back years.  The original Mossack Fonseca “Panama Papers” revelations that indicated that many of the Chinese elite with family links to Li Xinping, and The People’s Liberation Army had Mossack Fonseca accounts should have been a red flag (pun intended) for Canada, but was not.  Added to that, we have the ongoing saga of KPMG Canada, currently involved in a tax evasion scheme under investigation by the CRA, but mysteriously stalled. We are living in an entirely new global economy manipulated by dark forces. What will we do now that Vancouver has been ruined for decades to come?

An embarrassing tale of gross incompetence by Canadian authorities

The Globe & Mail Encourages Those With Additional Information To Anonymously Come Forward via SecureDrop

 

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Kenny Gu enters his car outside his home in West Vancouver, September 1, 2016

Documents shown to The Globe and Mail reveal that one-time developer Kenny Gu buys and flips homes in deals that are financed with investor money from China and mortgages issued to those investors by Canadian banks. His activities were brought to the attention of the Vancouver Police and Canada Revenue Agency who chose to do nothing.

BEN NELMS FOR THE GLOBE AND MAIL

Out of the shadows

Kathy Tomlinson reveals how loopholes and lax oversight are making it easy for a network of local and foreign speculators to play the system, and, in the process, fuel the steep rise in Vancouver home prices

Demetre Lazos says he couldn’t just stand by and watch real-estate speculation, as he puts it, destroy his city.

Convinced that his boss, a local speculator, was dodging taxes and misleading lenders, he decided to act, approaching both the police and the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) to divulge what he knows. Mr. Lazos, who has built luxury homes in Vancouver for three decades, offered documented evidence of possible fraud and tax evasion.

And yet, as he tells it, both the cops and the tax men blew him off: A CRA official who met him in the lobby of the agency’s downtown office told him to write to Ottawa; at Vancouver police headquarters, he was advised to call the Crime Stoppers hotline. (He did, he says, and got no results.)

The Globe’s SecureDrop service provides a way to safely share information with our journalists. You can find it here.

“I am very angry at the system,” says Mr. Lazos, who has since quit his job. “I love this country – and it is my country – but I think we are Mickey Mouse.”

And so, next, he came to The Globe and Mail and, over the course of several months, delivered a large, and disturbing, cache of documents that expose how speculators can maximize – and conceal – their profits.

As a result of Globe investigations into Vancouver’s supercharged real-estate market, others have come forward, too, including a federal tax auditor, as well as an accountant who says he regularly files tax returns for wealthy clients who buy and sell houses – and appear to declare far less than they earn. “Canada,” he says, “is like a Swiss bank account” for his clients. (It is important to note that Swiss banking secrecy laws no longer exist due to aggressive enforcement by the EU and the United States)

Ottawa says it is “studying” the issue, and B.C. has brought in a tax on foreigners who buy residential real estate in Vancouver. But those who see firsthand how real estate is traded like stocks and bonds say this isn’t nearly enough. “We have governments that are not doing their job,” argues Mr. Lazos, who acquired his inside knowledge while working for Jun Gang Gu, also known as Kenny Gu, a former civil servant originally from Nanjing, near Shanghai.

Mr. Gu came to Canada in 2009 under Ottawa’s now-defunct immigrant-investor program, which gave permanent residency to applicants who agreed to lend a significant amount of money to the federal government. He started out here as a developer, but the documents show that his business evolved to buying homes – using other people’s money– and then flipping them. His deals are financed with investor money from China and mortgages issued to those investors by Canadian banks.

The papers that Mr. Lazos provided The Globe paint a fascinating picture, revealing a network of players – local and foreign – who are parking money in Canadian real estate. They also show how loopholes and lax oversight make it easy for the speculators to play the system – and profit tax-free – by obscuring their ownership and earnings, all the while treating the properties as commodities, not homes.

Hidden ownership

Many people assume that speculators flip homes very quickly, but Mr. Gu and others have created a unique market in which they hold properties long enough for them to rise significantly in value. The Globe has examined numerous transactions involving properties held for years while prices in the city rose as more investors bought in. Some properties were developed, some rented out, and others left vacant.

Mr. Gu did not respond to several requests for an interview, but Chinese-language contracts with his clients provide key insights into how his system works.

Translated for The Globe, they show that Mr. Gu, or his companies, are hidden – the legal term is “beneficial” – owners of certain properties, even though absentee foreign clients bankroll everything from the down payment and mortgage payments to property-related taxes and other expenses. The homes and mortgages are registered in the names of his clients, their companies or spouses.

The financing Mr. Gu’s companies receive from those clients comes in the form of loans that are not taxable, and that fall within what’s known as “shadow banking” – an unregulated system that has exploded in popularity in China, and now appears to be getting a toehold in Canada. Such “peer-to-peer” loans, as they are also called, sidestep banks entirely, and promise lenders significantly higher returns than they can get elsewhere.

Mr. Gu’s lender clients earn their wealth primarily in China, while coming and going from Vancouver, according to Mr. Lazos. Records show that they give Mr. Gu power of attorney to facilitate everything through his small, nondescript Vancouver office, but his stake in the properties remains hidden. And although he is not licensed to broker mortgages or manage investments, records suggest he does both.

Those records also link him and his clients to activity involving at least 36 properties over the past five years. Yet Mr. Gu, 45, paid next to nothing in taxes last year, while millions of dollars flowed through his business and personal accounts.


‘Unless it changes, this will get worse’

An in-depth look at five of his deals this year reveals that he sold the properties for a cool $5-million more, in total, than he paid for them. One of those homes sat vacant for three years, in a city where many people can’t find a place to live. (The documents include two orders from the city to clean up the site.)

In addition, Mr. Gu has billed some clients up to $1.2-million, per property, for “management” and “commissions,” in the last two years. Over that same period, he and his wife have moved large sums of money between their bank accounts, up to $600,000 at a time. As well, Mr. Gu made credit-card payments totalling $310,000 in a brief period. The family’s vehicles include a BMW and a Mercedes.

Tax returns, among the documents, show that Mr. Gu, now a Canadian citizen, reported personal income of $45,865 last year. His wife, Min Tang, reported $23,612.

And yet, Ms. Tang recently bought a brand new house in West Vancouver – one of Canada’s richest municipalities, known for its mansions and stunning views – for $2.1-million. She listed her occupation on the title as “homemaker.” And she didn’t need a mortgage. Records show she bought the property from one of Mr. Gu’s clients – and for significantly less than the market value for other homes in the upscale area.

One of the Vancouver homes Mr. Gu flipped sat vacant for three years, in a city where many people can’t find a place to live. (The documents include two orders from the city to clean up the site.)

One of the Vancouver homes Mr. Gu flipped sat vacant for three years, in a city where many people can’t find a place to live. (The documents include two orders from the city to clean up the site.)

JOHN LEHMANN/THE GLOBE AND MAIL

‘Pervasive and systematic’

Mr. Gu’s three corporations all reported losses, in unaudited financial statements ending last year. Photocopies of some cheques made out to his companies – a fraction of the total – show that those companies received a minimum of $7.6-million in large payments between 2014 and 2016, many marked as “loans” from clients.

When Mr. Gu flips a property, his contracts stipulate that lender clients get back what they put in, plus a set return – 15 per cent in one instance. After the mortgage and the bills are paid, Mr. Gu keeps whatever is left, which, in some cases, appears to be hundreds of thousands of dollars.

According to legal and tax experts, this arrangement would allow him to avoid taxes, because the properties are not in his name. Mr. Gu can also maximize financing, because individual clients applying for mortgages, ostensibly to buy the homes, can borrow more money collectively than Mr. Gu could if he tried to finance properties on his own.

On the tax front, records suggest that the clients classify some of the properties as their principal residences, even though they do not live in them. That’s despite the fact that Canadian rules stipulate that a taxpayer cannot call a home a principal residence and sell it tax-free, unless they purchased it to live in it, and didn’t sell it within the same year.

“If you are buying and selling these homes as a business practice, that is business income and it’s taxable,” says Toronto-area accountant David Cramer, one of several experts The Globe consulted while reporting this story. He suggests that both Mr. Gu and his clients should be declaring that income. “If these guys paid proper taxes, these transactions would not go on as they do,” he explains. “It wouldn’t be nearly as profitable as it is.”

Tax lawyer Jonathan Garbutt estimates that the tax revenue lost through such activity is massive, particularly in pricey Toronto and Vancouver. “I think this is yet another example of non-enforcement of penalties under the law. It’s pervasive and it’s systematic,” Mr. Garbutt says. “Unless it changes, this will get worse. We will have a corrupt system.”

‘This has become a huge mess’

While many Canadians have come to resent the impact of foreign buyers on the real-estate market, the documents suggest that Mr. Gu pocketed much more than his clients did on some of his deals.

In one contract involving a rental property, his client was guaranteed a return of one per cent a month for paying the down payment and property-transfer tax upon purchase. Mr. Gu would collect the rent and pay the mortgage, then keep the rest of the profits when the duplex sold.

Mr. Gu sold the property two years later for $850,000 more than he paid for it, because the market price had jumped by that much. But according to the terms of the contract, his client stood to receive less than $90,000 of that windfall.

Documents show some of Mr. Gu’s clients also pay very little tax in Canada, despite having significant cash flow and assets. For example, in 2014, records show that client Shen Lin Zhang paid $2,594 in Canadian taxes on $59,711 in reported income, while his “homemaker” wife owned and lived in a Vancouver house worth $2-million.

Documents collected by Globe and Mail reporter Kathy Tomlinson for the Kenny Gu story.

Documents link Mr. Gu and his clients to activity involving at least 36 properties over the past five years.

JOHN LEHMANN/THE GLOBE AND MAIL

In the same period, Mr. Zhang sold another house worth $3-million and backed the purchase of two more, worth almost $4-million, in deals facilitated by Mr. Gu. Documents show that Mr. Zhang also owns foreign property and has almost $3-million in Canadian and Chinese banks.

Mr. Lazos says that Mr. Zhang earns his living in China. His CRA tax filing shows he is not a Canadian citizen, but he claims in it that he’s a B.C. resident. That allows him or his family members to classify any Canadian property as a principal residence and not report the profit when they sell.

Mr. Zhang declined The Globe’s request for an interview.

A Chinese-Canadian accountant in Vancouver estimates that he has filed tax returns for 1,000 clients just like Mr. Zhang in the past five years. He does not want to be named because he fears repercussions but says the CRA is partly to blame for lost revenue, because it doesn’t require taxpayers to report the sale of any principal residence.

“Every one of [those client families] has more than one house – two, three, four, sometimes more,” he says. “They don’t have to tell me. The CRA says they don’t have to tell anybody.”

The accountant says that people like Mr. Zhang who work abroad but declare on their Canadian tax returns that they are residents of Canada are legally required to report their worldwide income as well. He says that most, however, do not, and because those financial records are in China, they are impossible to check.

“They say, ‘I just want to pay around $5,000 in tax. How much does that work out to be in income?’ he says. “And then they say, ‘I have this much interest income from money I deposit with the Canadian bank or the company or whatever.’ That’s it.”

“I have in my hands people who claim to be residents. They never live here for more than a month of the year,” he says. “These people can be buying and selling homes and claiming to be a resident all the time without getting into any trouble. The CRA doesn’t look to find out.”

In fact, he believes the problem is so huge that the government should overhaul the tax code to get rid of the principal-residence exemption in its current form, which he acknowledges would be a very unpopular move. And one that would be a political non-starter: If the exemption were removed entirely, millions of Canadians would face the prospect of going deeply into debt – or, at minimum, forfeiting a major portion of their planned retirement incomes.

Another Vancouver accountant told The Globe that she and her colleagues see questionable real-estate transactions all the time, which they believe have contributed to skyrocketing prices. “This has become a huge mess. You have no idea how angry I am,” says Corina Ciortan. “A generation of people has been screwed. It’s so obvious. Everyone I work with is so angry because there is a select group of people who have profited from this.”

Federal figures reviewed by The Globe and confirmed by the tax agency show that auditors discovered $14.3-million in unpaid taxes from 339 individuals and companies last year through increased scrutiny of flips and other real-estate transactions in Vancouver.

A CRA auditor who came forward to The Globe with concerns about enforcement said that that is barely scratching the surface of the dodging going on. “CRA will catch very few people, because the [inexperienced] auditors … have no idea of foreign income and how individuals hide income,” says the auditor, who requested anonymity, for fear of being fired.

“Management has known of this issue for at least three years but did not want to pursue the real estate flips, because most of the auditees were Chinese in descent. They were scared of being racist … I can confirm this fact, based on meetings held.”

In a statement sent to The Globe, the CRA said that 2,203 files related to real estate were audited last year in Ontario and B.C., and that the agency plans to do “as many or more” next year. “The Canada Revenue Agency takes non-compliance very seriously, and is committed to protecting the fairness and integrity of the tax system,” it says.

Richer banks, poorer Canadians

In addition to holes in the tax system, speculators like Mr. Gu also rely heavily on Canadian financial institutions to give their clients multimillion-dollar loans. “They are using this money temporarily – to make more money – instead of using their own money,” Mr. Lazos says. “Then prices go up. We are making the bank richer and the Canadians poorer.”

Correspondence in the documents that Mr. Lazos supplied suggests that lenders think they are approving mortgages for his investor clients, not for Mr. Gu. If lenders are in the dark, experts say, they may be unwittingly violating anti-money-laundering laws, which require them to know detailed information about all their clients – which, in this instance, should include Mr. Gu.

 

The bank thinks it’s complying with anti-money-laundering laws in knowing its client, but it isn’t. No bank likes being lied to

Christine Duhaime an expert on anti-money-laundering laws

“If the client defaults, who are they going to collect from? Because they don’t know who the beneficial owner is of these properties,” says Christine Duhaime, an expert on anti-money-laundering laws. “The bank thinks it’s complying with anti-money-laundering laws in knowing its client, but it isn’t. No bank likes being lied to.”

E-mails in the records show that RBC questioned Mr. Gu when it realized mortgage payments from a bank client were coming from Mr. Gu’s business account, but let it continue after the client gave his permission for the payments to continue. The Globe asked RBC about this; it declined to comment.

Meanwhile, more recent documents show that Mr. Gu is moving into more sophisticated ventures. A recent business plan, written in Chinese, suggests he is crowdfunding to buy real estate, a practice that has been under scrutiny by regulators.

The plan states that Mr. Gu finds properties to buy, and his clients cover the down payments. The rest of the money comes from bank financing and money raised through “social finance.” Properties are then flipped, loans paid off, and profits shared by all.

Mr. Gu also persuaded investor clients to lend him a total of $1.4-million so that his company could invest in a B.C. jade-mining operation.

Contracts show that 28 clients were promised a 12-per-cent return if they each lent $50,000 to Mr. Gu’s company for less than a year. That amount is interesting: It matches, to the dollar, the maximum a citizen can take out of China in a year.

Mr. Gu solicited the deals without giving his investors a prospectus, which is required by law unless those investors are close associates or wealthy enough to bear the risk. Records show that Mr. Gu is now under investigation by B.C.’s securities regulator over this scheme.

As a result of The Globe’s inquiries, both B.C.’s Financial Institutions Commission, which regulates mortgage brokers, and the B.C. Securities Commission have expressed interest in the kind of real-estate activities Mr. Gu engages in.

Mr. Lazos says that his whistle-blowing will be worth it only if it jolts Ottawa and B.C. into action. And his reasons, at least in part, lie close to home: “I hate the fact that for my daughter and my grandchildren, there is no way they can own a house in this city.”

Kathy Tomlinson is a Globe and Mail reporter based in Vancouver. You can join her for a Facebook Live chat on Vancouver real estate on Sept. 13 at 11 a.m. PT/2 p.m. ET at facebook.com/theglobeandmail.


Cultural Revolution II? South China Morning Post Closes Its Chinese Language Website

This has just hit the wires tonight, September 11th. The South China Morning Post, perhaps the most influential and important bilingual, English and Chinese, media outlet in Hong Kong has suddenly and somewhat mysteriously announced that it is ceasing operations of its Chinese-language website nanzao.com. SCMP is owned by Jack Ma and Alibaba. It should also be noted that local elections in Hong Kong last week elected at least six new “pro-democracy” legislators.


This has just hit the wires tonight, September 11th. The South China Morning Post, perhaps the most influential and important bilingual, English and Chinese, media outlet in Hong Kong has suddenly and somewhat mysteriously announced that it is ceasing operations of its Chinese-language website nanzao.com. SCMP is owned by Jack Ma and Alibaba. It should also be noted that local elections in Hong Kong last week elected at least six new “pro-democracy” legislators. 
FROM QUARTZ

The South China Morning Post has suddenly shut down its Chinese-language website

In one fell swoop, years of reporting from the Chinese-language website of Hong Kong’s main English newspaper, the South China Morning Post, is gone.

This is the notice that users saw when they went to the Chinese site, nanzao.com, on Friday (Sept. 9) afternoon:

View image on Twitter

“We thank you for your past support,” the notice adds.

Current and past employees of the SCMP told Quartz that they were not told about the decision to shutter the site.

One story that has disappeared with the SCMP’s Chinese site is a controversial interview with Zhao Wei, a lawyer linked to human rights defender Li Heping, who were both arrested by Chinese authorities last year. The interview, which carried no byline, was first published on SCMP’s Chinese site in July before being translated for its English site. David Bandurski of the University of Hong Kong’s China Media Project J questioned how the SCMP managed to interview Zhao when she was still held incommunicado. No one close to Zhao had been able to confirm her release at the time.

The interview with Zhao is seen by some as part of a growing trend of forced and often televised confessions of Chinese dissidents, which are appearing in Hong Kong media outlets with growing frequency.

“Will the South China Morning Post now open itself up to moonlighting as a pawn of the mainland authorities in sensitive political cases? Will it allow itself to become a cog in China’s mea culpa machine?” wrote Bandurski.

The South China Morning Post was acquired by Jack Ma, one of China’s richest men and the founder of e-commerce platform Alibaba, in December 2015. Joseph Tsai, the executive vice-chairman of Alibaba,told the New York Times then that the decision to purchase the newspaper was made in order to provide coverage of China that was untouched by the “negative” bias of the Western media.

In 2013, Jack Ma was reportedly furious at the Chinese language website of the South China Morning Post after it ran an interview with him, in which he said that the 1989 crackdown on pro-democracy protesters in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square was “the most correct decision.”

A spokesperson said in response to a query from Quartz regarding the closure of the site that the four staffers working on the Chinese site would be reassigned to jobs elsewhere in the company, and that the “closure… enables us to align resources towards further growth.”

Zheping Huang contributed reporting

Panama Papers Canadian Connection

The release of the Panama Papers is of such potential significance and magnitude that it is difficult to know where to begin. I have decided that I will begin with the most interesting and relevant topic for me, the Canadian angle: possible links from Mossack Fonseca’s tax haven shell companies to the Vancouver BC real estate market, the current Canada Revenue Agency investigation of KPMG’s Canadian offshore tax haven scheme, and potential conflicts of interest within CRA. The KPMG and CRA issues have been extensively investigated and reported by CBC News, and also discussed on this site.


UPDATE May 5, 2106:  National Public Radio’s Takeaway news analysis program, today interviewed James Henry, senior adviser at the Tax Justice Network and a senior fellow at the Columbia Center for Sustainable Investment. James’ interview specifically discusses the foreign dark money driving the Vancouver housing market, providing further confirmation of my points in this post.  Audio of the interview begins at 19:45 in the podcast below.

Kleptocrats

 

The release of the Panama Papers is of such  potential significance and magnitude that it is difficult to know where to begin.  I have decided that I will begin with the most interesting and relevant topic for me, the Canadian angle: possible links from Mossack Fonseca‘s tax haven shell companies to the Vancouver BC real estate market, the current Canada Revenue Agency investigation of KPMG‘s Canadian offshore tax haven scheme, and potential conflicts of interest within CRA. The KPMG and CRA issues have been extensively investigated and reported by CBC News, and also discussed on this site.

London, Miami, New York City, San Francisco and Vancouver: Similar Market Dynamics

With regard to the Vancouver housing bubble and links to shell companies in offshore tax havens, the probability of such links has already been suggested by other overheated real estate markets, notably in Miami, New York City and San Francisco.  The high-end Manhattan real estate market has been overheated by a dramatic influx of foreign shell companies, as first reported by The New York Times in February 2015.  The U.S. Treasury announced later in 2015 that it would begin identifying and tracking secret shell company buyers of New York and Florida real estate, which would likely expand to include the San Francisco market.

National Public Radio in the United States, recently interviewed the vice president of Transparency International, on the subject of shadow money in real estate markets. The guest talked about how the offshore deals impact ordinary people – and the first thing discussed was housing in cities like New York and San Francisco. The shadowy banking system allows people with illegal money – money from arms trading, money from drug sales, money stolen from the people of a struggling country – to launder it and use it, among other things, to buy real estate.

So the bidding wars that are driving up the cost of housing in cities, and the mega-priced condos that are shoving out other types of housing in places with scarce real estate, are directly linked to this dark money.

The Miami Herald documented this nicely.

“Money from people linked to wrongdoing abroad is helping to power the gleaming condo towers rising on South Florida’s waterfront and pushing home prices far beyond what most locals can afford.”

 

The Vancouver Real Estate Connection

Anyone familiar with the Vancouver real estate market would be naive to assume that the same dynamics at work in the United States are not at work in Vancouver.

vancouver-westside-home-1-984x500

This Grey’s Point “tear down” property shown here, recently sold for over $9 Million, more than $1 Million over the asking price of $7.8 Million. There were 11 offers, all cash, and no offer included any contingencies.

While the U.S. Treasury and the New York Housing Authority took action nearly a year ago to stem the offshore secret shell company real estate activity, Canadian authorities have been much slower to act. B.C. Premier Christy Clark has been sharply criticized for her failure to act, which may be linked to political payments to Clark related to the B.C. real estate industry.

The Dark Foreign Money Connections

It is, therefore, now no secret that foreigners, keen to avoid publicity, are behind many of these real estate transactions. The New York Times noted that the Manhattan market has been significantly influenced by money from Russian oligarchs, one of whom was denied entry to Canada for suspected organized crime connections.  The Miami market, not surprisingly, is seen to be influenced by drug cartel money and corrupt Latin American Billionaires.

The San Francisco Bay Area, while also influenced by Silicon Valley money, has seen its own influx of dark money in the real estate market. At first, the money was aimed at Silicon Valley and suspected to be focused on industrial espionage.  The People’s Liberation Army has massive financial resources of its own from its ownership of a mobile phone network, and international weapons trading by PLA companies like Norinco.  It is suspected of involvement in Silicon Valley espionage, and the establishment of “front” companies. In one particular case, a California high-tech startup without any apparent external funding was led by the son of a prominent PLA General.  Think of the PLA as its own venture capital firm.  Today, the emphasis seems to have shifted to cyber espionage, and the dark money has grown exponentially, evolving into real estate as elsewhere.

 

Vancouver and China

lixinping

Vancouver’s connection to Asia is perhaps now greater than that of the San Francisco Bay Area, which was formerly seen as the West Coast’s top Asian cultural metropolis. The Vancouver connection goes back generations, as with San Francisco. Vancouver’s importance has been enhanced recently by two major events: the 1997 return of Hong Kong to China, and the dramatic rise of Chinese capitalism, wherein lie the seeds of Vancouver’s  real estate dilemma. As Deng Zhao Ping said many years ago, “To get rich is glorious.”

The Panama Papers have exposed the names of numerous members of Chinese Premier Li Xinping’s family with Mossack Fonseca secret offshore accounts. This is only the outermost layer of the onion. Recent investigative reports in The New Yorker (February 22, 2016) “The Golden Generation,” and in The New York Times (April 12, 2016), have identified a significant local Vancouver population of billionaire Chinese “fuerdai,” or “second generation of the rich,” many are the children of officials from the outlying provinces in China, not the Beijing or Shanghai elite. The numbers support the notion that the influence of dark Chinese money on the Vancouver economy is much larger than previously understood. We have also seen how real estate firms and others have been only too eager to serve this money, and to engage in their own “shadow flipping” schemes to drive up real estate prices even further.

Anyone who has seen the Lamborghini dealership near Granville Island may ask themselves rhetorically how many cities in the World can support a Lamborghini dealership. When combined with the publicly disclosed $1 Trillion (U.S. dollars) that fled China in 2015 alone, and the artificially low value of the renminbi, you have a frenzy to buy hard assets offshore and the makings of a real estate nightmare in Vancouver. Li Xinping has personally expressed his displeasure with both the capital flight and the “fuerdai” living abroad, but despite his extraordinary personal power as the “new Mao”, he seems powerless to stop the trend, even the offshore secret accounts among his own family. Since the release of the Panama Papers revelations about Li Xinping’s family, Chinese Internet censors have blocked all access to this information at the “Great Firewall.”

 

The Offshore Tax Haven Market and the Canadian Connection

The other important aspect of the Canadian connection to the Panama Papers and Mossack Fonseca is the huge market opportunity to offer offshore tax havens. This opportunity has grown ever larger as the 1% has solidified its control of global wealth.  Even assuming that there is no direct connection between Canadian firms and Mossack Fonseca, there is likely immense market pressure to compete or lose wealthy clients.  On the other hand, a direct connection is not impossible, though not yet proven.  We are about to learn of substantial links from global banks like HSBC, UBS, Credit Suisse and others to Mossack Fonseca. By way of example, Vladimir Putin and his Russian oligarch friends did not directly set up their secret offshore tax havens. They hired their financial institutions and friends to do it for them, secretly.  What is clear is that at least one Canadian accounting firm, KPMG, has in fact set up its own offshore tax haven on the Isle of Man, which is now being formally investigated by the Canada Revenue Agency. In a separate but related matter, four KPMG senior partners were arrested in the UK, for their part in another tax evasion scheme.

KPMGsign

History Of Offshore Tax Havens

The offshore tax haven market has been around for decades in other forms, and as some like to point out, is not always illegal or designed for dark criminal money.  That said, it is undeniable that secret tax evasion schemes have an obvious appeal to those with dark money. Long before the Panama Papers revelations, there were the Swiss banks, which became famous for such secret accounts. The Swiss system was not immune from illegal and unsavory clients and their money, but the Swiss banks were immune from any exposure thanks to their policy of absolute secrecy for their clients. However, eventually, the Swiss banks were prosecuted by the U.S. government and the European Union, wealthy clients were exposed and prosecuted for tax evasion and worse.  UBS was the most prominent Swiss bank to be prosecuted and paid a $1.5 Billion fine for its sophisticated tax evasion scheme for corporations and individuals. At the time, former U.S. Senator Phil Gramm, and former Chairman of the Senate Banking Committee was Vice-Chairman of UBS.  The global links to tax evasion fraud became apparent, and Swiss banking secrecy became a thing of the past.

At the same time,  as the sheer amount of plutocrat, drug cartel, and political oligarch money skyrocketed, the need for such tax evasion schemes also skyrocketed. For corporations, obliging countries like Ireland, for example, established highly favorable tax laws to attract corporations to base their operations there. Google, Facebook, and LinkedIn have operations there explicitly designed to evade taxation, and as the corporate location for much of their intellectual property, also to avoid taxes. Elaborate tax evasion schemes with colorful names like the “Dutch Sandwich,” or the “Double Irish” became popular with accounting firms. In the case of Ireland, the culmination was the announcement that Pfizer would acquire Allergan, an Irish pharmaceutical company, and transfer its corporate headquarters from New Jersey to Ireland, in a tax evasion scheme known as “corporate tax inversion.”  The public outrage was so vociferous that this week the Obama Administration announced strict regulation against “tax inversions,” which led Pfizer to abandon its plan.  In the case of Canada, we have had Burger King acquiring Tim Horton’s and relocating to Canada for the same reason.

burgerking

KPMG Tax Haven Scheme, CBC News, And Canada Revenue Agency Investigation

In the case of wealthy individual tax evasion schemes, this is where UBS and Mossack Fonseca come into play as the global market opportunity for tax evasion grew exponentially.  In Canada, the first hint of that something might be wrong, driven by the global market for tax evasion schemes, has been CBC News ongoing investigation into KPMG, its Isle of Man tax haven scheme, and the formal Canada Revenue Agency investigation and probable criminal charges against KPMG. This story has been extensively reported in a number of CBC News investigative stories and reported here on this blog.

In the last two weeks, we have seen new developments in the Canadian offshore tax haven melodrama that include CBC News revelation of a secret CRA amnesty offer to wealthy KPMG clients, conflicts of interest with CRA officials and accounting firms, and further delays in the CRA’s prosecution of the case against KPMG. It is worth noting that KPMG’s key defense argument is their right to client confidentiality, as with the Swiss banks. The argument failed in Switzerland and is likely to fail in Canada. The CRA case also languished under the Harper government, as both Joe Oliver and Stephen Harper engaged in activities with KPMG that have been seen as inappropriate and potential conflicts of interest.  In a rather strange development this week, the CRA requested a copy of the Panama Papers from CBC News, which was refused.  The CRA request seems to me more like a classic case of “a day late, and a dollar short.”

CRA

My summary assessment is that the Panama Papers Canadian Connection will not go away, and there are likely to be more revelations.