Prices will fall if Chinese buyers withdraw, warns Harry Triguboff

Prices will fall if Chinese buyers withdraw, warns Harry Triguboff
Jessie RichardsonDecember 7, 2020

Iconic billionaire property developer Harry Triguboff has said that apartment prices will tumble and rentals will rise if demand from Chinese developers drops off.

The man known by some as High Rise Harry told The Australian that he anticipates a 10-15% price drop in some areas if Chinese buyers were to stop purchasing Australian properties. He also said that the subsequent halt in new developments would also cause rental rates to rise.

"If production (of units) dropped, the impact would be a huge rise in rents," he told The Australian. Triguboff attributed residential prices to poor national planning systems.

According to the publication, about 70% of Triguboff’s apartments are sold to offshore buyers and Australians of Asian descent. However, Triguboff told Bloomberg earlier this year that his company does not market properties to mainland China and has no intentions to begin doing so. 

"They come to me," Triguboff told Bloomberg in February. "Today, we’re part of the Chinese market, more than 10,000 apartments is nothing," he said, referring to Meriton's construction capacity.

Triguboff established the Meriton Group in 1963 at just 30 years old. According to Triguboff, the business is now worth $6.1 billion. The apartment developer is mostly active in Sydney and South East Queensland, and also owns or manages about 3,000 apartments in addition to its construction and development activities.

According to BRW's 2013 Rich 200 list, he is Australia's eighth richest person, with a net wealth of $5.5 billion. Triguboff was born in China and moved to Australia in 1948. 

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