What s Driving Chinese Investment In London Real Estate : Différence entre versions
(Page créée avec « Cranes tower above construction sites, and surround 20 Fenchurch Street, nicknamed the Walkie-Talkie [https://cachnhietphatloc.vn/pallet-nhua-pvc pallet] building, in the... ») |
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− | Cranes tower above construction sites, and surround 20 Fenchurch Street, nicknamed the Walkie-Talkie | + | Cranes tower above construction sites, and surround 20 Fenchurch Street, nicknamed the Walkie-Talkie building, in the financial district of the City of London, in Britain February 13, 2016. Reuters / Hannah McKay <br><br>LONDON — It's boom time for [https://cachnhietphatloc.vn/pallet-nhua-pvc tấm pallet ép gạch] commercial property investment in London.<br><br>Total investment hit £12.03 billion in the six months to June, according to figures from commercial estate agents CBRE, marking a 24% increase [https://cachnhietphatloc.vn/tam-nhua-pvc nhựa tấm pvc] on the same point last year. <br><br>This year's figure was [http://rt.com/search/everywhere/term/inflated/ inflated] by the record £1.3 billion sale of 20 Fenchurch Street — the much-maligned "Walkie Talkie" building — to Hong Kong-based Infinitus Property Group. <br><br>But the figures do point to a wider trend of growing investment from [http://www.zettabyte.ws/devwiki/index.php?title=User:YasminDesmond1 tấm pallet ép gạch] Hong Kong and mainland China: investment from the region accounted for just 3.4% of total investment in 2012, and in the year [https://cachnhietphatloc.vn/tam-lop-eurolines tấm lợp nhựa] so far counts for over 32%, as the chart below illustrates: |
Version du 12 septembre 2017 à 04:40
Cranes tower above construction sites, and surround 20 Fenchurch Street, nicknamed the Walkie-Talkie building, in the financial district of the City of London, in Britain February 13, 2016. Reuters / Hannah McKay
LONDON — It's boom time for tấm pallet ép gạch commercial property investment in London.
Total investment hit £12.03 billion in the six months to June, according to figures from commercial estate agents CBRE, marking a 24% increase nhựa tấm pvc on the same point last year.
This year's figure was inflated by the record £1.3 billion sale of 20 Fenchurch Street — the much-maligned "Walkie Talkie" building — to Hong Kong-based Infinitus Property Group.
But the figures do point to a wider trend of growing investment from tấm pallet ép gạch Hong Kong and mainland China: investment from the region accounted for just 3.4% of total investment in 2012, and in the year tấm lợp nhựa so far counts for over 32%, as the chart below illustrates: