(What is this?)
Housing prices up 7% in major Chinese cities in July
Not registered?  Join IPIN now FREE   |  Forgot password?

Housing prices up 7% in major Chinese cities in July

Article Date : Tuesday, August 19, 2008       Bookmark on Facebook   Bookmark on Del   Bookmark on Digg   Bookmark on Facebook   Bookmark on Reddit   Bookmark on Spurl   Bookmark on Furl   Bookmark on Yahoo   Bookmark on Magnolia   Bookmark on StumbleUpon   Bookmark on BlinkList

According to the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) and the National Bureau of Statistics prices of real estate in 70 major Chinese cities rose 7.0% in July compared to the same month last year. This is 1.2 percentage points lower than the June level which means the growth rate...


Article provided by China Economic Review.
Read the full article here >>

DISCLAIMER: The opinions expressed here are the views of the author of this news item and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of Propertyshowrooms.com.
Listing Separator

Related Articles

  1. Chinese shares up 1.05% after large rate cut
  2. China property market recovery expected second half of 2009
  3. Suzhou Xushuguan Economic Development Zone
  4. Air China announces Australian expansion plans
  5. Gaw Capital to raise $1.5 billion for Chinese real estate



Listing Separator

Let us search for you Let Us find Property in China for You

Fill out a requirements form and our experts will help you find a great selection of Properties for sale in China.


Subscribe to This Feed

RSS News
Subscribe to this RSS Feed
Country: China
Channel: All

More RSS FeedsGo

Prices from only 38,000 GBP

Low deposit with prices starting at just 38,000 GBP. Istanbul is one of Europe's top 2 investment locations for 2008, according to Price Waterhouse Coopers. An investment with outstanding prospects.

View Investor Report >>

Media/Press SectionProperty News Search


   

News ArchivesNews Archives

View worldwide property news from as far back as 2005 in our News Archives Section.

View News ArchivesGo