Real estate: post-crisis boom draws to a closeAfter several years of cheap money and soaring prices, there are growing signs of problems in property marketsDeath of the high street weighs on landlords round the worldShop vacancies rise across Europe and big brands desert New York’s Fifth AvenueWhy China fell out of love with New York propertyAfter a crackdown on foreign deals by Beijing, Chinese investors have all but disappeared from the marketYou Asked, We Answered: Property prices explainedIn this video series, FT journalists respond to questions from the FT’s Instagram followersWhy buyers are turning away from luxury propertyFrom Vancouver to Sydney, high-end apartments are lying empty despite prices being slashedUp in the air: the global craze for skyscraper livingThe rush to construct upwards has led to 1,500 tall towers being built in the past decadeMore from this SeriesWeWork: the ‘hypothetical’ company at the heart of the property marketThe shared office space provider sees itself as a technology, not a real estate, group Rate cuts cannot curb property boom and bust There is little evidence that monetary policy alone can control house price swings
Real estate: post-crisis boom draws to a closeAfter several years of cheap money and soaring prices, there are growing signs of problems in property marketsDeath of the high street weighs on landlords round the worldShop vacancies rise across Europe and big brands desert New York’s Fifth AvenueWhy China fell out of love with New York propertyAfter a crackdown on foreign deals by Beijing, Chinese investors have all but disappeared from the marketYou Asked, We Answered: Property prices explainedIn this video series, FT journalists respond to questions from the FT’s Instagram followersWhy buyers are turning away from luxury propertyFrom Vancouver to Sydney, high-end apartments are lying empty despite prices being slashedUp in the air: the global craze for skyscraper livingThe rush to construct upwards has led to 1,500 tall towers being built in the past decadeMore from this SeriesWeWork: the ‘hypothetical’ company at the heart of the property marketThe shared office space provider sees itself as a technology, not a real estate, group Rate cuts cannot curb property boom and bust There is little evidence that monetary policy alone can control house price swings