From: Sultan Bin Sulayem Sent: Thursday, April 3, 2014 1:21 PM To: Jeffrey Epstein; Jefftey Epstein Subject: Wall Street journal <=group style="margin: 0px; padding: Opx; border: 0px; outline: 0px; vertic=l-align: baseline;"> http://m.europe.wsj.com/home-page <http://m.europe.wsj.com/h=me-page> Chinese l=vestors Change Face of Dubai Investment by Individual Chinese Investors Nearly Tripled Last Year <http://si.wsj.net/public/resources/images/MI-CC137_CHINAD_D_20140401=51742.jpg> Shoppers visit a store in the Dragon Mart shop=ing mall, part of an emerging Chinese retail center in Dubai. Photo: ASSOCIATED PRESS By RORY JONES <http://m.europe.wsj.com/articles=SB10001424052702304157204579475383372801044?mg=reno64-wsj#> About 15 miles from the Burj Khalifa on the a=ge of the Arabian desert is a growing housing and retail community that wou=d look more at home in Beijing than Dubai: Stores and restaurants have Chin=se signs and a huge dragon sculpture adorns the Dragon Mart shopping mall.<=span> After pouring billions o= dollars into cities including London, New York and Sydney, individual inve=tors and developers in China are expanding into Dubai. Chinese investors and developers weren't ver= active before 2009, when Dubai was hit by a real-estate crisis. But they n=w play an increasingly important role in the market, according to brokers, d=velopers and analysts. =emand from individual buyers is helping launch new developments and fueling=Dubai's residential recovery, while Chinese contractors and banks are revit=lizing high-profile projects that stalled in the previous boom. <= style="margin: Opx 0px 0.75rem; padding: 0px; border: 0px; outline: Opx;=vertical-align: baseline;">The market looked a lot different i= 2009, when Dubai World, one of the emirate's major government-owned holdin= companies, said it would stop making debt repayments, shocking global fina=cial markets and sparking a drop in residential house prices of more than 5=%. Th