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Barfoot & Thompson is New Zealand's largest privately owned, non-franchised real estate company, based in Auckland, New Zealand. The company is family owned and operated and is still run by the same Barfoot and Thompson families that started the business in the 1920s. The current directors are Peter Thompson (managing director) and Stephen ...
The property bubble in New Zealand is a major national economic and social issue. Since the early 1990s, house prices in New Zealand have risen considerably faster than incomes, [1] putting increasing pressure on public housing providers as fewer households have access to housing on the private market.
AltaVista (acquired by Yahoo! in 2003, shut down in 2013) Bixee.com (India) (acquired by Ibibo) Blekko (acquired by IBM in 2015 for its use for Watson-based products) BlogScope (acquired by Marketwire) BRS/Search (now OpenText Livelink ECM Discovery Server) Btjunkie; Cuil (patents acquired by Google after shutdown) DeepPeep
Current status. Defunct (July 8, 2013 (2013-07-08)) [1] AltaVista was a Web search engine established in 1995. It became one of the most-used early search engines, but lost ground to Google and was purchased by Yahoo! in 2003, which retained the brand, but based all AltaVista searches on its own search engine.
The Real Estate Authority (REA), formerly the Real Estate Agents Authority (REAA), is the New Zealand Crown entity responsible for the regulation of the New Zealand real estate industry as well as the agents within it. [4]
List of companies on the NZX. This is a list of companies (equities and funds) on the NZX, the national stock exchange main board. This list is complete and up to date as of February 2021. Stock name. Symbol.
Pages in category "Real estate companies of New Zealand" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
In 1998, Yahoo replaced AltaVista as the crawler-based search engine underlying the Directory with Inktomi. Yahoo's two biggest acquisitions were made in 1999: Geocities for $3.6 billion and Broadcast.com for $5.7 billion. Its stock price skyrocketed during the dot-com bubble, closing at an all-time high of $118.75/share on January 3, 2000 ...