土豆要堵外国买房者漏洞

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公司操作那就没有个人住房免税一说了啊。
公司操作算投资,投资的话商业避税可比那个厉害了
管理开销还能走帐目
这避税名细就多了
你marginal tax是50%,企业税收可没那么变态
 
以美国斗日本的经验,是得先把外国人关进来再打。。。大温大多是先锋,目前战略应该是引到东部贫困地区,包括渥太华。:D
走,考个房产经纪证去
 
公司操作算投资,投资的话商业避税可比那个厉害了
管理开销还能走帐目
这避税名细就多了

商业运作须请教特朗普了。:cool:
 
有鸟用,整个皮包公司,非PR走公司投资,然后公司出面收购物业,你怎么封
通知下去吧,入SDR后RMB是走贬的,是我说的。。经济学家谢百三是给气死的。:evil:
 
通知下去吧,入SDR后RMB是走贬的,是我说的。。经济学家谢百三是给气死的。:evil:
咋半,赶紧买加币避险吗?石油还在涨,这早买早发财啊,今年最后3个月再炒个20%
 
咋半,赶紧买加币避险吗?石油还在涨,这早买早发财啊,今年最后3个月再炒个20%
别听我的。。我是光说不练。。。前两周USC8.88的时候我满处喊抄底,可自己愣给忘了,现在10.50
我现在基本是离场状态,赌的是川朴浪。。进场也是快进快出。:D
 
别听我的。。我是光说不练。。。前两周USC8.88的时候我满处喊抄底,可自己愣给忘了,现在10.50
我现在基本是离场状态,赌的是川朴浪。。进场也是快进快出。:D
你还有闲钱投资,一般人如我钢蹦都没
 
公司操作算投资,投资的话商业避税可比那个厉害了
管理开销还能走帐目
这避税名细就多了
你marginal tax是50%,企业税收可没那么变态

Holding companies 的税跟你的 50% marginal tax 差不多!
 
以美国斗日本的经验,是得先把外国人关进来再打。。。大温大多是先锋,目前战略应该是引到东部贫困地区,包括渥太华。:D
美国已经不是以前的美国,中国更不是以前的日本,完全不一样的故事。
老美现在能干啥?中东都丢了。跟沙特为敌,叙利亚完败,等着民主党发展renewable energy了。lol
喔,手上还是有武器的,QE,美金,我们想印多少就印多少,印的越多越值钱。
 
公司操作算投资,投资的话商业避税可比那个厉害了
管理开销还能走帐目
这避税名细就多了
你marginal tax是50%,企业税收可没那么变态
以房产投资为目的的海外公司收60%的税
 
新政策出笼了.... 请高人讲讲。

Ottawa has brought this country's housing fantasy to an end
Rob Carrick
The Globe and Mail
Published Monday, Oct. 03, 2016 4:48PM EDT
Last updated Monday, Oct. 03, 2016 9:16PM EDT

The fantasy of endlessly rising house prices is over.

If the housing market doesn’t respond to measures announced by the federal government on Monday, then expect more action ahead. Argue all you like about how economic and real estate fundamentals affect prices. In the end, it’s government action that will bring housing to heel.

Thank god for some adult supervision in housing. We need it for all the people who are basing the biggest financial move of their lives on the idea that houses always go up in price. Ideally, government intervention today prevents a painful correction ahead.

A lot of people are torqued about the influence of foreign buyers on our hottest housing markets, and the feds did target this group. But a measure with much wider applicability is the stricter enforcement of a mortgage rate stress test that people must take if they have a down payment of less than 20 per cent and therefore must have mortgage default insurance.

You now have to take this test if you’re in this group and want a variable-rate mortgage or a fixed-rate mortgage with a term under five years. Starting with mortgage insurance applications made on Oct. 17 and thereafter, fixed-rate mortgages of five years and longer will be included as well. Mortgage broker David Larock said two-thirds of borrowers today are going with the five-year rate, so including them in the stress test is a major development.

This is all the more true when you consider just how tough the stress test is. The idea is to see if you can handle rates at levels that are much higher than they are today. The reference rate is called the Bank of Canada conventional five-year fixed posted mortgage rate, and it’s based on rates advertised by the Big Six banks. This rate now sits at 4.64 per cent, which compares to about 2.4 per cent for a nicely discounted five-year fixed rate in today’s market.

A lot of housing bulls have based their argument on a view that interest rates are low and not about to rise in a serious, sustained way because the economy’s too weak to stand it. But the more widely applicable stress test is like a back-door interest rate hike for some buyers.

“It’s the same as if rates went up to 4.64 per cent overnight,” Mr. Larock said. “There is a danger that government might have overtightened.”

The existing stress test was just as tough. But it only affected a minority of buyers who, if they flunked the test, could move to a five-year fixed term and avoid it altogether. Now, that option is disappearing.

Only a minority of mortgages in Canada these days require mortgage insurance, which means a lot of buyers have down payments of 20 per cent of more. While it’s not widely known, lenders are increasingly having these mortgages insured as well. Lenders are bearing the cost of the insurance, so it’s basically an invisible process for the customer.

Starting Nov. 30, however, lenders will have to be more stringent in cases where they’re insuring the mortgages of clients who have a down payment of 20 per cent or more. These customers will have to meet the same tough borrowing requirements as people with high-ratio mortgages (down payments less than 20 per cent). For example, the stress test will be used and the maximum amortization period will be 25 years.

Finally, the government is closing loopholes that foreign buyers use to avoid paying capital gains tax on homes in this country. Canadians do not have to pay tax on the gains if they sell their principal residence for more than they pay.

If all of these measures combined don’t contain the housing market, there’s always what the government calls “lender risk-sharing.” If an insured mortgage defaults, lenders are 100 per cent covered. Ottawa wants to consult on the idea of lenders bearing at least some of the risk of a default, a change that would probably result in lenders being less aggressive with mortgage rate discounts.

Just as important as these measures themselves is the message they send to those who believe what’s happening in our housing market today is normal or healthy. Ottawa’s worried and it’s taking action. Prices will not rise endlessly – base your financial decisions accordingly.
 
新政策出笼了.... 请高人讲讲。

Ottawa has brought this country's housing fantasy to an end
Rob Carrick
The Globe and Mail
Published Monday, Oct. 03, 2016 4:48PM EDT
Last updated Monday, Oct. 03, 2016 9:16PM EDT

The fantasy of endlessly rising house prices is over.

If the housing market doesn’t respond to measures announced by the federal government on Monday, then expect more action ahead. Argue all you like about how economic and real estate fundamentals affect prices. In the end, it’s government action that will bring housing to heel.

Thank god for some adult supervision in housing. We need it for all the people who are basing the biggest financial move of their lives on the idea that houses always go up in price. Ideally, government intervention today prevents a painful correction ahead.

A lot of people are torqued about the influence of foreign buyers on our hottest housing markets, and the feds did target this group. But a measure with much wider applicability is the stricter enforcement of a mortgage rate stress test that people must take if they have a down payment of less than 20 per cent and therefore must have mortgage default insurance.

You now have to take this test if you’re in this group and want a variable-rate mortgage or a fixed-rate mortgage with a term under five years. Starting with mortgage insurance applications made on Oct. 17 and thereafter, fixed-rate mortgages of five years and longer will be included as well. Mortgage broker David Larock said two-thirds of borrowers today are going with the five-year rate, so including them in the stress test is a major development.

This is all the more true when you consider just how tough the stress test is. The idea is to see if you can handle rates at levels that are much higher than they are today. The reference rate is called the Bank of Canada conventional five-year fixed posted mortgage rate, and it’s based on rates advertised by the Big Six banks. This rate now sits at 4.64 per cent, which compares to about 2.4 per cent for a nicely discounted five-year fixed rate in today’s market.

A lot of housing bulls have based their argument on a view that interest rates are low and not about to rise in a serious, sustained way because the economy’s too weak to stand it. But the more widely applicable stress test is like a back-door interest rate hike for some buyers.

“It’s the same as if rates went up to 4.64 per cent overnight,” Mr. Larock said. “There is a danger that government might have overtightened.”

The existing stress test was just as tough. But it only affected a minority of buyers who, if they flunked the test, could move to a five-year fixed term and avoid it altogether. Now, that option is disappearing.

Only a minority of mortgages in Canada these days require mortgage insurance, which means a lot of buyers have down payments of 20 per cent of more. While it’s not widely known, lenders are increasingly having these mortgages insured as well. Lenders are bearing the cost of the insurance, so it’s basically an invisible process for the customer.

Starting Nov. 30, however, lenders will have to be more stringent in cases where they’re insuring the mortgages of clients who have a down payment of 20 per cent or more. These customers will have to meet the same tough borrowing requirements as people with high-ratio mortgages (down payments less than 20 per cent). For example, the stress test will be used and the maximum amortization period will be 25 years.

Finally, the government is closing loopholes that foreign buyers use to avoid paying capital gains tax on homes in this country. Canadians do not have to pay tax on the gains if they sell their principal residence for more than they pay.

If all of these measures combined don’t contain the housing market, there’s always what the government calls “lender risk-sharing.” If an insured mortgage defaults, lenders are 100 per cent covered. Ottawa wants to consult on the idea of lenders bearing at least some of the risk of a default, a change that would probably result in lenders being less aggressive with mortgage rate discounts.

Just as important as these measures themselves is the message they send to those who believe what’s happening in our housing market today is normal or healthy. Ottawa’s worried and it’s taking action. Prices will not rise endlessly – base your financial decisions accordingly.

泪啊,这到底是限制富人买房,还是更进一步把穷人买房的机会剥夺了?富豪会怕那什么利率压力测试?人家北京二环内卖个厕所,就可以来这里拍现金买豪宅了,压力个鬼啊。

只有老老实实的本地打工族们,才会存在首付不足的压力,这个测试难为的是他们,可他们恰恰是真正需要买房过日子的人。这政策,真够土豆的。
 
新政策出笼了.... 请高人讲讲。

Ottawa has brought this country's housing fantasy to an end
Rob Carrick
The Globe and Mail
Published Monday, Oct. 03, 2016 4:48PM EDT
Last updated Monday, Oct. 03, 2016 9:16PM EDT

The fantasy of endlessly rising house prices is over.

If the housing market doesn’t respond to measures announced by the federal government on Monday, then expect more action ahead. Argue all you like about how economic and real estate fundamentals affect prices. In the end, it’s government action that will bring housing to heel.

Thank god for some adult supervision in housing. We need it for all the people who are basing the biggest financial move of their lives on the idea that houses always go up in price. Ideally, government intervention today prevents a painful correction ahead.

A lot of people are torqued about the influence of foreign buyers on our hottest housing markets, and the feds did target this group. But a measure with much wider applicability is the stricter enforcement of a mortgage rate stress test that people must take if they have a down payment of less than 20 per cent and therefore must have mortgage default insurance.

You now have to take this test if you’re in this group and want a variable-rate mortgage or a fixed-rate mortgage with a term under five years. Starting with mortgage insurance applications made on Oct. 17 and thereafter, fixed-rate mortgages of five years and longer will be included as well. Mortgage broker David Larock said two-thirds of borrowers today are going with the five-year rate, so including them in the stress test is a major development.

This is all the more true when you consider just how tough the stress test is. The idea is to see if you can handle rates at levels that are much higher than they are today. The reference rate is called the Bank of Canada conventional five-year fixed posted mortgage rate, and it’s based on rates advertised by the Big Six banks. This rate now sits at 4.64 per cent, which compares to about 2.4 per cent for a nicely discounted five-year fixed rate in today’s market.

A lot of housing bulls have based their argument on a view that interest rates are low and not about to rise in a serious, sustained way because the economy’s too weak to stand it. But the more widely applicable stress test is like a back-door interest rate hike for some buyers.

“It’s the same as if rates went up to 4.64 per cent overnight,” Mr. Larock said. “There is a danger that government might have overtightened.”

The existing stress test was just as tough. But it only affected a minority of buyers who, if they flunked the test, could move to a five-year fixed term and avoid it altogether. Now, that option is disappearing.

Only a minority of mortgages in Canada these days require mortgage insurance, which means a lot of buyers have down payments of 20 per cent of more. While it’s not widely known, lenders are increasingly having these mortgages insured as well. Lenders are bearing the cost of the insurance, so it’s basically an invisible process for the customer.

Starting Nov. 30, however, lenders will have to be more stringent in cases where they’re insuring the mortgages of clients who have a down payment of 20 per cent or more. These customers will have to meet the same tough borrowing requirements as people with high-ratio mortgages (down payments less than 20 per cent). For example, the stress test will be used and the maximum amortization period will be 25 years.

Finally, the government is closing loopholes that foreign buyers use to avoid paying capital gains tax on homes in this country. Canadians do not have to pay tax on the gains if they sell their principal residence for more than they pay.

If all of these measures combined don’t contain the housing market, there’s always what the government calls “lender risk-sharing.” If an insured mortgage defaults, lenders are 100 per cent covered. Ottawa wants to consult on the idea of lenders bearing at least some of the risk of a default, a change that would probably result in lenders being less aggressive with mortgage rate discounts.

Just as important as these measures themselves is the message they send to those who believe what’s happening in our housing market today is normal or healthy. Ottawa’s worried and it’s taking action. Prices will not rise endlessly – base your financial decisions accordingly.
更进一步把穷人买房的机会剥夺了
the new regulation should just applies on foreigners
 
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