The Global Property Guide – Relaunched!
Filed Under (Properties) by admin on 13-08-2009
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The Global Property Guide today re-launched its web site to make its data more accessible. The home page has been simplified. Major categories have been spelled out. The new Home Page has been organized around an expanded menu, to help the reader navigate the site. Key data items are easier to find, more obvious.
The Global Property Guide
The Global Property Guide is the authoritative source of information on buying residential property. It covers every investible country in the world, from the perspective of income, tax, and capital gains. We provide research and information on 131 countries to residential property investors, with brief information on 85 countries.
Property, as an asset class, is highly susceptible to booms and busts. Across the Western world major countries have experienced a prolonged residential property boom.
Like stock prices (but with markedly different dynamics) residential property prices are now coming back down to earth. We help investors make sense of these swings by providing tools of analysis, and displaying data in a clear, comprehensive and accurate format.
Our fundamental residential property market data includes
• Price change 1 year
• Price change 5 year
• Price change 10 year
• Square metre price city centre
• Total round-trip transaction cost
• Gross yield
• Price to rent (P/R) ratio
• Price to Gross Domestic Product
• Change in interest rates
• Taxes on income (effective rates)
• Capital gains tax (effective)
• Inheritance taxes (effective)
• Buying process (graded by quality)
• Tenant legislation (graded as landlord-friendly)
• Residence (high tax / low tax)
• Economic growth
• Competitiveness
• GDP per capita
• Competitiveness rank, improvement over 5 years
• Stage of economic cycle
“Our aim is to be the Bloomberg of international residential property,” says publisher Matthew Montagu-Pollock, referring to the financial site on trading desks around the world (http://www.bloomberg.com/). “Bloomberg provides data – but also makes it easy to use.”
“It’s important for a residential investor be able to see what his likely return on investment will be. What his taxes will be. To be able quickly to check whether the laws are landlord-friendly. To survey the inheritance laws. All this is now available, for almost every country in the world, on our site, without any marketing material or any attempt to sell you anything – just the facts.”
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Description:
The Global Property Guide is an on-line property research house.
Publisher:
Matthew Montagu-Pollock Phone: (+632) 867 4220 Mobile: (+63) 917 321 7073
Email: editor@globalpropertyguide.com
Address:
Global Property Guide
http://www.globalpropertyguide.com
5F Electra House Building
115-117 Esteban Street
Legaspi Village, Makati City
Philippines 1229
Watch the video related to properties
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Help answer the question about properties
What physical properties of minerals are used to identify minerals?Please list five (5) properties. If you do more, I'll give you best answer.

hey i will also check out your website, thank you for the information
Another great and informative video Joe. I always appreciate the information you provide.
Copper is a ductile metal with excellent electrical conductivity, and finds extensive use as an electrical conductor, heat conductor, and as a component of various alloys.
Iron is stronger than copper, and is often used for building things like bridges, and if purified, can be made into steel. Iron is magnetic, unlike copper, so it is used to make magnets.
Everything will go into probate after all liens and bills are paid the rest will go to the child or children. If the parents own a home or other properties these will be put up for sale and the profits split between the children. That is how it's done in America how it's done in other countries I have no idea.
great job. you are very helpful in decision making
…..i'm not sure, ..but do you need a housekeeper?
Great info, i am still knowing it will be ahrd for no money down but at least it can be done – will give this a shot.
Instead of water, you can use a non-polar organic liquid like benzene
to measure the volume of the salt. Salt doesn't dissolve in benzene
so you can use benzene displacement to determine the volume of
a sample. Now you have the volume and you can weigh the salt to
determine the mass, so you can now find the density.
Hope this answers your question; just use a non-polar liquid that will
not dissolve salt to find your volume. Filtering will separate the liquid
from the salt if you want to recover the two compounds.
Conside common table salt. It is composed of chlorine, a highly poisoous gas, and sodium, a highy reactive metal that bursts in to flame upon exposure to oxygen.
yes. no money down. no money down. that really is the only way i can afford right now,.
very nice videos and very useful investment tips
i will put ur tips and 2 good use
Umm.. I think you probably mean the heat of fusion. That is, water at 32 degrees still has to have energy removed from it before it changes to ice at 32 degrees. Thus, spraying the plants with water keeps them from freezing until the temperature gets a good number of degrees below 32 (I don't recall how low, but if you get too cold then nothing will help). Here's a more precise explanation:
When you withdraw thermal energy from a liquid or solid, the temperature falls. However, at the transition point between solid and liquid (the melting point), extra energy is required (the heat of fusion). To go from liquid to solid, the molecules of a substance must become more ordered. For them to maintain the order of a solid, extra heat must be withdrawn.
The heat of fusion can be observed if you measure the temperature of water as it freezes. If you plunge a closed container of room temperature water into a very cold environment (say −20 °C), you will see the temperature fall steadily until it drops just below the freezing point (0 °C). The temperature then rebounds and holds steady while the water crystallizes. Once completely frozen, the temperature will fall steadily again.
The temperature stops falling at (or just below) the freezing point due to the heat of fusion. The energy of the heat of fusion must be withdrawn (the liquid must turn to solid) before the temperature can continue to fall.
many times, the more you owe, the more is loaned to you, especially if you have a history of always paying your loans. More than likely, that person has a profit and loss statement to show to the lender, and is financially sound.
thank you for all of the good work helping me with this momentous task
I’ve seen a few of your videos now and i am always impressed. Kudos