Foreign Real Estate Investment: Will It Spread To Your Town?
April 8th, 2008 by Mike Farmer | 4 Comments | Filed in Commentary, Real Estate Investing, Real Estate MarketAlthough I haven’t read any reports in the last couple of months, at the beginning of the year there was buzz about foreign investment in US real estate. Some reported on foreign investors taking advantage of the weak dollar to put down enough to create a good cash flow with the expectations, also, of appreciation after the market turns around. Domestic investors were still leveraging properties happy with breaking even. On the face of it this sounds like foreign investors have the better idea. I’ve always thought of leveraging too much as risky with less return, but I suppose if the interest rates are low enough, it can make sense in certain situations where appreciation is expected, but it doesn’t seem like a good short term strategy right now, and could even be a poor long term strategy, unless you consider long term 10 or more years.
It seems to me the present real estate environment in the US is ripe for foreign investment and this trend will continue for awhile, especially since we are one of the more stable countries regarding private property, and the odds are we’ll soon be out of our economic doldrums for another round of good old American progress.
Some see foreign investment as worrisome, considered from the angle of indepedence and nationalism; this is a traditional view of sovereignty, suscpicious of foreign influence. The internationalist mindset, while still concerned with sovereignty, has a more co-operative goal where countries interact more with one another and there is less fretting over foreign investment — it’s seen as a healthy aspect of worldwide markets, although respectful of national differences and independence, good for international economic investment, plus the sharing of cultures and ideas and technology.
What most people really fear is extreme globalism where all barriers and boundaries are erased in a one world order — this is not likely to happen due to the strength of the desire nations have for sovereignty and the myriad problems that arise regarding who would govern the “one world” - plus cultural and religious differences, diverse political ideologies, and so forth. The only way it could happen would be through coercion and then it could never be held together without worldwide acceptance and committment to the order.
So, getting back to reality, we are in an internationalist society where economic interaction is growing worldwide. Is this a problem or a boon for the US? For large investors in metropolitan areas it looks like it might be a boon. Whether it’s bad for the country, individuals will vary in their opinions, but I believe it’s healthy to foster worldwide economic growth and interdependence — the more we trade properties, invest, share technological ideas, buy from and sell to one another, improve cultural understanding and all prosper together, the less we will be trying to kill or enslave one another.
Technology has made the world small, so that we are less likely to be at odds through cultural ignorance, although we have a long way to go. How will all this international investment affect the average investor? If foreign investment continues in the US, it might spread from New York and Washington, D. C. to other parts of the country once foreign investors discover more opportunites, so that the average investor might be dealing with foreign buyers and sellers on a regular basis. Will strategies change? Will the average investor have to broaden their cultural knowledge and start gathering information on trends and what foreign investors find attractive? What are the marketing opportunities for investors with properties to sell? If it grows rapidly will there be a resistance in smaller cities to foreign investment? I certainly have more questions than answers, but it might be time to ask these questions and start preparing for the possibility. Those investors who are prepared and proactive will be in the best positions.
![]()
Welcome to Our Blog!
Welcome to the Real Estate Dispatch from BiggerPockets.com. Our blog brings together experts in various fields of real estate with the goal of keeping our readers informed and up to speed. Whether you're a real estate professional (lender, Realtor, banker, etc), investor (landlord, flipper, wholesaler, etc.), or simply a consumer, renter or homeowner interested in the world of real estate, this blog is the place for you to get involved!
You can subscribe to our RSS feed, get blog updates by email, join our free mailing list, or best of all, join our social network along with 25,000 others interested in real estate education, dealmaking, networking, and marketing.
Tags: foreign investments, foreign real estate investment, real estate, real estate investing, Real Estate Investing, Us real estate


























Joshua Dorkin

Charles Feldman

Ted Karsch.




Troy Schuricht
Anwell Tsai
Richard Warren
Jim Watkins
