Is it a momentary pause in the U.S. housing sector's recovery, due to the winter slowdown in construction, or the sign of a deeper problem?
China's 76-mile-long project would serve as an important link between frigid northern China and its tropical south.
The man behind the Economist Intelligence Unit’s annual “liveability” report is the first to admit that “liveability” is a hard word to define.
As corn prices hit a near five-year low, farmers are struggling as their land becomes less valuable.
Businesses that rely on having a prime location may be out of luck in Yangon, Myanmar's commercial center.
And here's why that may be a very bad idea for the world's second-largest economy.
Rep. Mark Takano has called for more oversight of rental-backed securities, a new financial innovation introduced by Blackstone late in 2013.
The Land of the Rising Sun is becoming the Land of the Rising Real Estate Market.
The United Arab Emirates may have welcomed 10 new skyscrapers in 2013, but another nation completed three times as many.
RealtyTrac, in its report released Monday, said that foreclosure filings were down 53 percent from their peak in 2010.
A companion question: Were U.S. home prices buoyed artificially by business investors in the market for quick profits?
The state tops one less-than-favorable list.
A former California real estate salesman is looking to establish Galt's Gulch in Chile, a utopian mix of Ron Paul, Ayn Rand and bitcoin.
Analysts see a fall from recent peaks in industrial agricultural spending by farmers, which could hurt equipment dealers, farmers and farmland investors.
Big investors are seeking U.S. properties and deals to diversify away from Israeli stocks and bonds, among other reasons.
Also, in another solid year for the U.S. housing sector, new home prices advanced at a double-digit rate.
The move was a bit of a surprise, but the U.S. stock market reacted favorably.
Average new home prices in major cuties are up 9.9 percent, and even more in Beijing and Shanghai.
Despite improvements in the housing market, 6.4 million U.S. homeowners still owed more on their homes than what they're worth, CoreLogic said.
In the last 8 years, most of the 37,000 “investor-class migrants” who settled in British Columbia originated in mainland China.
The renter share of all U.S. households is climbing, and half of renters are spending more than 30 percent of their income on housing.
The world’s largest hotel operator is returning triumphantly to public markets.
The move would result in an average 11-basis-point increase in guarantee fees, and help private players.
Global shopping-mall operator Westfield Group paid $1.4 billion for the privilege.
Think of it as Chinatown on steroids. Plans for a sprawling China-themed facility in the Catskills are being reviewed.
A 7 percent GDP target has become a more likely choice in the policy circle.
U.S. stock markets and property markets in Brazil could be heading toward a bubble, Nobel laureate Robert Shiller has warned.
Was it a comment by Janet Yellen or something else that prompted the first mortgage rate drop in two weeks?
New York's Fifth Avenue, Hong Kong's Pollock's Path and Singapore's Paterson Hill all made the list.
There is something on the streets of New York City that most people do not know about that can harm them. What is it?