organization:national association of realtors

  • #blockchain and VR are Coming After the Real Estate Industry
    https://hackernoon.com/blockchain-and-vr-are-coming-after-the-real-estate-industry-d2aab0c62036

    This Paid Story is brought to you by Deedcoin.Disruptive tech is changing industries ranging from taxicabs to healthcare. Can it improve the homebuying experience too?The U.S. real estate landscape has long been dominated by the National Association of Realtors (NAR), an influential industry group that’s gotten in hot water before for their attempts to squelch disruptive technology (see their 2008 consent decree from the U.S. Department of Justice, which forbid them from discriminating against online brokerages). But better tech and a better experience for home buyers are coming to the real estate world, whether NAR is prepared for it or not.Blockchain and Virtual Reality (VR) are two of the most talked-about technologies in Silicon Valley — and with good reason. Blockchain’s immutable (...)

    #blockchain-startup #real-estate #virtual-reality #paid-story

  • The Golden Generation
    Why China’s super-rich send their children abroad.
    http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2016/02/22/chinas-rich-kids-head-west

    A study by the Bank of China and the Hurun Report found that sixty per cent of the country’s rich people were either in the process of moving abroad or considering doing so. (“Rich” was defined as being worth more than ten million yuan—around $1.5 million, a considerable fortune in China, though not stratospheric.) The Chinese are currently transferring money out of the country at a rate of around four hundred and fifty billion dollars a year. Most of that money has gone into real estate. According to the National Association of Realtors, Chinese buyers have become the largest source of foreign cash in the U.S. residential real-estate market.

    Moneyed people leave China for various reasons. Some are worried about #pollution. Others want to secure a good education for their children. Zhou Xueguang, a sociology professor at Stanford who received his bachelor’s degree in China, told me, “The competition in the Chinese school system is known to be brutal.” He went on, “There are only so many slots in good schools, and, at a certain level, it doesn’t matter how much money you have—you won’t be able to get in.” But, for affluent Chinese, the most basic reason to move abroad is that fortunes in China are precarious. The concerns go deeper than anxiety about the country’s slowing growth and turbulent stock market; it is very difficult to progress above a certain level in business without cultivating, and sometimes buying, the support of government officials, who are often ousted in anti-#corruption sweeps instigated by rivals.

    #Chine #Riches #occident