China Property Market

China’s Commercial Real Estate Prices Up 10% Over Scarcity of Assets

Amid the ongoing economic turmoil in China, the country's real estate market is continuously growing. For one, the commercial property prices climbed 10 percent in the first quarter of 2016 compared to the previous year.

It's A Seven-year Low For China's 2015 Property Investment As Sales Improve

It's been the slowest property investment growth for China in 2015 at 1 per cent despite the improved national sales, and as oversupply make developers slowdown in construction, the pace will likely turn negative this 2016, Reuters reports.

China Real Estate Is Changing

Looking into the list of the big cities in China with the largest population inflow, it seems to debunk the once popular assertion that the city's population is decongesting as more people are looking to move away from the urban areas, The Star reports.

China Dominates U.S. Real Estate Market

China has been a major player in New York real estate market but is now expanding their influence on a national scale as it surpasses Canada as the largest foreign buyer of homes in the United States, The Wall Street Journal reports.

Chinese Nationals Pull Back From Investing In US Real Estate

Chinese investors are no longer interested in investing in the US housing market. Karen Xu, a Shanghai resident who was in the market for a Miami one-bedroom condominium in the price range of $500,000 to $750,000 said that with China's current economic status, she has now changed her mind in investing in the US right now.

China Insurers to Invest $73 Billion On Overseas Property

Chinese insurers are looking at a 5-year plan in diversifying their assets by increasing their overseas property investments. Real estate services firm DTZ/Cushman & Wakefield on Wednesday published this report and revealing the total amount of would-be investments of US$73 billion, The Real Deal website reports.

China Real Estate Advises Investors to 'Buy Land Now Or Never'

China's provincial governments are working hard to bring in revenue, however, they seem to have taken their measures too far by leaving China real estate bears hanging on a balance, Forbes reports.

China's Rich Invading U.S. Real Estate Market

The Shanghai stock market and Hang Seng Index suffered another loss in August and China’s rich are looking towards the West for hope in the US real estate market.

‘Chinese Billionaire’ Purchased A $52 Million Mansion In Sydney

A certain Chinese billionaire acquired a $52 million mansion located outside Sydney, Australia. What makes it even more astonishing is that fact that he never set foot inside the mansion before he made the acquisition.

More Chinese Banks Easing Lending Curbs to Boost Property Market

Four major banks of China, the second largest economy of the world, are poised to relax lending regulations to help boost the sliding property market of the country, several reports reveal.

China Home Prices Fall In August as Demand Drops

Home prices in China fell for the fourth straight month in August as demand for properties continued to slide.

Small Chinese Investors Looking to Invest in US Real Estate

We already knew that with the Chinese housing market down in the dumps, a large number of investors from the world's second largest economy were looking to invest in the U.S. real estate. But, it's not just the big players who want to cash in on the American property segment. Small investors from the country have now started following their richer, larger counterparts.

China Home Prices Fall in August, but Decline Pace is Slow

Home prices in China, the second largest economy of the world, fell for the fourth consecutive month in August; but the pace of decline was slower this month, a few individual surveys revealed.

China Home Prices Fall For Third Consecutive Month

Home prices in China fell for the third straight month in July as developers reduced property prices to boost a weak demand.

Short Term Rentals: The New Trend in Chinese Property Market

Amid the whirlwind of falling home prices and dwindling property sales, China has found a new way to cope with the real estate tragedy - short term rentals.

China Home Sales Surge on Easing Regulations and developer Discounts

Home sales in China went up 33 percent in June after local governments started easing the stringent property regulations and allowed developers to offer discounts to boost home buying activity.

Chinese Cities Easing Housing Curbs to Boost Sluggish Property Market

As the Chinese real estate bubble threatens its own and several other economies around the world, several cities have already started easing the stringent curbs on housing that bogged down buying activity in the country.

China’s Manhattan Rip-Off is Another Ghost City (VIDEO)

Four years ago, China - the world's second largest economy - started building a replica of the New York City. Located south of the capital city Beijing, construction on what was planned as a bustling financial district took off. But today, as the economy is in serious crisis, the peninsula that has an uncanny resemblance to Manhattan is in a lull. The mini-city is deserted with no sign of a bustle. Though the skyline of the Yujiapu development in Tianjin City boasts of tall, swanky skyscrapers - they all lie, sadly, empty.

China’s property market crash could trigger a global economic meltdown

As several reports on China's dwindling property market crowd the web, the condition has sparked concerns that the downturn in the second-largest economy of the world could have a domino effect on the global economy, resulting in another great crash.

China’s home prices fall in May for the first time in two years

The Chinese real estate balloon could already be deflating as home prices started to decline in May, falling for the first time in two years. However, housing officials of China announced that the decline in prices is “normal” and they are just a “high base effect.”

"China’s property market is just a sinking Titanic"

China's property market woes have been widely covered by the global media, sparking concerns about the health of the world's second largest economy. Now, a Chinese real estate mogul has gone a step forward to compare the market to the ill-fated "Titanic" that sunk in the Atlantic in 1912.
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