Real Estate – Investing Abroad
The chambers of commerce of many countries put on events all over the world to lure investors to their countries. In many countries, when you go there and reveal that you are an investor, you will be treated with respect and given a lot of support and assistance.
When you have invested in a country, you will often be treated like royalty and offered even more investments that may not already be publicly available. And when you have invested sufficiently in some countries, you will get invitations to advise them, joint-venture with them, or sit on their corporate boards.
What a sharp contrast to other professions! A few people have admonished me for suggesting investors look beyond their own borders, claiming that real estate is so complex, and that the laws regarding real estate are so involved, that it is difficult to keep up with the regulations in your own turf, let alone in a foreign country. Consequently, they claim, investing overseas is risky and foolish, and I am just grandstanding or showing off by talking about investing internationally.
Well, let’s consider a few alternative attitudes. First, few people living in the United States realize this, but the value of the U.S. dollar, when measured against a trade-weighted basket of currencies, has fallen in the seven years since the year 2000 by a massive 58 percent (as tourists traveling to Europe are finding out through the increased cost of a vacation there). In other words, if you had shipped $1 million overseas with the intent of investing it in real estate, but you never quite got around to making the investment, and today you repatriated the funds back to the United States, you would have more than $2 million. I have investors who took my advice and invested in New Zealand at a time when a United States dollar bought NZ$2.40. Today, that same NZ$2.40 buys over US$1.90. In other words, the value of their investment has nearly doubled without even taking into account how the investment in New Zealand has fared.