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Mazaya Monthly Real Estate Report
Week 1 - July 2016
British Investments abroad should remain
unaffected from any negative impacts that
may occur due to “Brexit”
It is worth mentioning that, in 2016, as
well as in the coming few years, we will
witness further financial and economic
alliances and divisions; merger and
acquisitions will be an increasingly
common activity of companies and
organisations
worldwide,
while
breakups and divisions may well be
experienced by various countries.
With local economic sectors and the
health of the global economy at stake,
tests of a different type will emerge
and the real estate sector is expected
to be at the forefront of industries
affected by such developments. This is
because development and expansion
phases, including investments that
transcend borders, are affected
by recession across all fields and
sectors in the global economy.
The nature and circumstances of real
estate markets differ from country to
country and are a result of positive or
negative impacts on the real estate sector,
which are typically defined by supply
and demand activities during times of
boom and recession. At this time, it is
fair to say that major economic sectors
of all world countries are still suffering
from financial and economic pressures,
with no country yet able to note anything
resembling a full recovery, in the
aftermath of the global financial crisis.
Its impact and effects have remained
constant up to the present day and
governments of all countries are currently
only providing temporary solutions
to long-term challenges. All of which
points to a need for a restructuring of the
international economic system as a whole.




