The increase in non-residents’ real estate investments is driven by expatriates
Research by Morel & Uri 2021
Morel and Uri (2021) analyze foreign-owned real estate in France. They observe that real estate investment accounted for about 16% of the total stock of foreign direct investment in France. At the end of 2019, non-residents owned 1.5% of residential real estate in France, which amounted to 125 billion euros, four times more than in the early 2000s. According to Morel and Uri, only half of the rising value can be explained by rising prices.
Furthermore, the authors suggest that one of the main drivers of foreign ownership is the expatriates since 42% of non-residents who held residential real estate assets were born in France. The predominant share of real estate assets was owned by residents of border countries (led by the United Kingdom, 29 billion euros at the end of 2019), but this trend declined from 86% in 2009 to 80% in 2019.
Even though the study focuses on foreign-owned real estate, it does not examine anonymous ownership and/or owners located in tax havens. However, their results show that Switzerland (16.1%) and Luxembourg (3.5%) are among the top ten origin countries for real estate assets owned by foreigners in 2019.
The highest proportion of non-resident homeowners in France was observed in Paris. However, the authors did not find indication that non-resident buyers had an inflationary effect on Parisian real estate prices over the 2010–2019 period. While the purchase price per square meter of housing purchased by non-residents was 2.5% higher than that of housing purchased by residents, the transaction price per square meter of housing sold by non-residents on average was 2.5% lower.
Key results
- At the end of 2009, non-residents owned 1.5% of residential real estate in France, up from 1% in 2001. The value of their real estate assets amounted to 125 billion euros, four times more than in the early 2000s.
- Switzerland and Luxembourg are among the top ten countries of origin of foreign investment in French residential real estate, contributing 16.1% and 3.5% respectively to total foreign investment.
- For similar housing characteristics, non-residents conduct real estate transactions at prices that are not very different from those of residents.