Tag archives for China

BEREL Sunday International Investing Edition: Chinese Government Tightens Credit Access Further

In an effort to “take some of the air out of property bubble,” the Chinese government will be tightening access to credit in the coming months. The real estate and development industries in China are likely to suffer in the process as well as the wider economy in the region. Chinese banks have been extremely limited in the volume Read full article »

Chinese Real Estate Unsold Inventory on the Rise

Prices are holding in China, but the volume of unsold homes in the country is on the rise thanks to government curbs and intervention in the real estate market. The Chinese government has been imposing increasingly strict lending limits and ownership regulations on investors and traditional homeowners in an attempt to control the growth – and potential bursting – of Read full article »

Chinese Investors Boost Vancouver Real Estate Prices

Last year, Canada issued 1,600 visas to Chinese investors planning to move to British Columbia to raise their families in the west. Now, those investors are snapping up Vancouver real estate and driving up property prices. These investors may split their time between North America and Asia, but they want their kids to “integrate fully into the world, into an Read full article »

China Expert Fears “Major, Major Economic Correction”

A few months ago China expert Nicholas Lardy dismissed concerns that China could be facing a problematic property bubble. Now, he’s changed his mind. Lardy now has said that a housing downturn in China could produce a “major, major economic correction” in China thanks to the country’s “massive stimulus spending and lending” in 2009 and 2010. This spending has created Read full article »

Analysts Watch China with Concern

Residential property prices in major Chinese cities are heading downward, prompting concern that China’s property bubble may be deflating if not headed toward a resounding pop. The Chinese government has been fighting this possibility by imposing increasingly strict sanctions on lending and development. If the Chinese real estate boom goes bust, it would present a major threat to the entire Read full article »

The Politics of Real Estate

Few industries are as profoundly impacted by the political machinations in Washington as the real estate industry. Whether it's old legislation like Jimmy Carter's Community Reinvestment Act or Barack Obama's massive mortgage bailouts, the U.S. political machine has a huge impact (usually bad) on the business of real estate.

Ideally, we could ignore politics. But here at the Bryan Ellis Real Estate Letter, we insist on seeing the world with clarity - including the reality of Washington's aggressive involvement in every facet of our business, from mortgage lending to real estate sales license; from loan modification regulations to appraisal requirements... every piece of our business is profoundly impacted by politics. So rather than stick our heads in the sand and ignore reality, readers of the Bryan Ellis Real Estate Letter choose to be informed and prepared.

About Bryan Ellis

Bryan Ellis is an Atlanta-based real estate analyst and publisher of the widely read newsletter "The Bryan Ellis Real Estate Letter". With over 200,000 subscribers - including real estate investors, agents, brokers, appraisers and other real estate professionals - the Bryan Ellis Real Estate Letter is among America's largest sources of unbiased coverage of politics and public policy for the real estate industry.

Bryan Ellis serves as editor in chief for the Bryan Ellis Real Estate Letter and is assisted by an extraordinary staff of writers, researchers and editors who are each real estate experts in their own right and who assure that the news we report is well researched, factual, and highly relevant to today's real estate industry.

Bryan is very happily married and has two wonderful daughters. He makes his home in the suburbs of Atlanta, Georgia. You can contact the team at the Bryan Ellis Real Estate Letter here.