China‘s economy is not doing great, and the stock market of the world’s largest economy is demonstrating a falling trend.
While it’s not as bad as the summer of 2015 that led to a massive crash, the Chinese economy follows the other Asian markets closely
The Hong Kong Hang Seng Index (HSI) faced a drop on Monday, losing 3.6% as well.
The fourth quarter of 2016 appears to be a challenge for many investors in China, many of which returned to the safety of stocks after a switch to Bitcoin and domain name investing.
During this switch, some claimed to have established an annual revenue of 20% at least by trading domains – even without any previous knowledge in domains.
This type of claim does not seem to hold any water, as volume of sales and median prices of short domains has fallen substantially.
We keep track of the Chinese domain market for domains 2 to 4 characters in length, for the .CN, .COM and .NET TLDs.
Today’s list consists of two days worth of data, courtesy of BenMi.com, the Chinese domain sales tracker.
hqn.cn
xyp.cn
dxhx.cn
hkqd.cn
lzkf.cn
nnsr.cn
qdbl.cn
qdkq.cn
qtzp.cn
ryck.cn
xdh.com
xfm.com
xzfy.cn
xzmp.cn
ybyj.cn
8505.com
bjnr.com
byzd.com
cqnt.com
cylb.com
ddkm.com
dwkt.com
fkjw.com
fwnr.com
gljg.com
gqtm.com
hngy.com
hxxr.com
kfnk.com
lhzp.com
lrpz.com
myzy.com
qjpn.com
rqyw.com
xmhm.com
yqyh.com
ytyn.com
zzbq.com
zzmt.com
zzng.com
zznq.com
zztq.com
Let’s not forget the millions of domains that are set to expire in the next 4 months, the speculation buys that now are being sold for pennies on the dollar.