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Nathan Brooker writes about UK and international property markets for the FT Weekend.
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Deal or no deal — the damage has been done
The FT looks at previous housing market crashes to see if the circumstances are likely to be repeated now
Rate rises, tax hikes, political turmoil . . . is the year ahead all about volatility?
‘Bomad’ loans are both deeply unfair on a societal level and deeply risky on a personal one
The way we treat AI has been a political issue since proposals to give robots ‘electronic personhood’ status
The Bridget Jones film director says children’s data must be treated differently
London is home to more than 1.5m people under the age of 12. During the holidays, it feels like 15m
It’s easy to knock the trade but the owner-marketer is worse
The rising property market in cities such as London fuels disaffection and leads to ‘commuting’ criminals
Property developers are rebranding swaths of the capital with corny American names
Since 2008, property markets in the world’s major cities have ‘synchronised’ and left nations and citizens behind
Some of the most expensive cities are high-risk, but the economics of housing there still stack up — for now
There is strong demand for high-end residential in Japan’s former imperial capital
The problem isn’t lack of supply, it’s that the current supply is too expensive
How much prime residential property could you buy in the world’s priciest cities?
Game of Thrones fame has boosted tourism and house prices in this ancient walled city
The rapid growth of prices in the Kenyan capital has slowed, but agents remain bullish
A buoyant tourism trade and infrastructure investment cushioned falls in house prices
It is the latest area of the capital to have a movie named after it, but its homes already have blockbuster status
In the first of a series on good property buys, we look at this city’s hipster HQ
You could get a French winery, a Moroccan riad or a whole village in Italy — but would it make financial sense?
How houses in the city went from being homes to financial assets
After years of unbridled growth, property values have dropped in the wake of stamp duty reforms and Brexit fears
Some first-timers need to borrow 40 times their salary to buy in parts of the city
Sales are increasing in previously under-the-radar coastal locations, and prices are heading into the millions