Joseph Peterson reviews recent expired domain name sales on NameJet, including which short domains were picked up by Chinese buyers.
Anyone who reads these weekly reports on the expired domain market (or, rather, NameJet’s share of it) will have noticed that the chart can be divided into Chinese purchases and non-Chinese purchases. The split is fairly clean. GEAI.com ($8.2k)? China. HNBC.com ($6.4k)? China. DAIG.com ($2.8k)? China. DUVI.com ($2.5k)? Probably not China.
In this article on DomainNameWire, Joseph Peterson has put forth a report on expired domain name sales and divided it into Chinese and non-Chinese buys.
The report provides a deep analysis behind some of the domain name sales and is worth a read.
There is also a comment from David Yang who mentions that some of the pinyin names are in circulation within the Chinese market itself going from one buyer to another, without getting into the world market.
You may put forth your views on the recent sales and Chinese market, and discuss in the comments below!
Anyone who reads these weekly reports on the expired domain market (or, rather, NameJet’s share of it) will have noticed that the chart can be divided into Chinese purchases and non-Chinese purchases. The split is fairly clean. GEAI.com ($8.2k)? China. HNBC.com ($6.4k)? China. DAIG.com ($2.8k)? China. DUVI.com ($2.5k)? Probably not China.
In this article on DomainNameWire, Joseph Peterson has put forth a report on expired domain name sales and divided it into Chinese and non-Chinese buys.
The report provides a deep analysis behind some of the domain name sales and is worth a read.
There is also a comment from David Yang who mentions that some of the pinyin names are in circulation within the Chinese market itself going from one buyer to another, without getting into the world market.
You may put forth your views on the recent sales and Chinese market, and discuss in the comments below!