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- This topic has 35 replies, 6 voices, and was last updated 16 years, 8 months ago by Casca.
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March 6, 2008 at 9:13 AM #12002March 6, 2008 at 9:40 AM #165209kev374Participant
people will always refuse to lower their price until they are forced to. They will not willingly give up their “gains”. Very few people have rational business sense, they would rather chase down the market and lose everything rather than make a huge cut and take in less profit. This part of human nature can be very easily witnessed on the show Deal or No Deal, people get so greedy and go for that “one more time” to make just a little more and then end up losing everything!!!
March 6, 2008 at 9:40 AM #165217kev374Participantpeople will always refuse to lower their price until they are forced to. They will not willingly give up their “gains”. Very few people have rational business sense, they would rather chase down the market and lose everything rather than make a huge cut and take in less profit. This part of human nature can be very easily witnessed on the show Deal or No Deal, people get so greedy and go for that “one more time” to make just a little more and then end up losing everything!!!
March 6, 2008 at 9:40 AM #165303kev374Participantpeople will always refuse to lower their price until they are forced to. They will not willingly give up their “gains”. Very few people have rational business sense, they would rather chase down the market and lose everything rather than make a huge cut and take in less profit. This part of human nature can be very easily witnessed on the show Deal or No Deal, people get so greedy and go for that “one more time” to make just a little more and then end up losing everything!!!
March 6, 2008 at 9:40 AM #165201kev374Participantpeople will always refuse to lower their price until they are forced to. They will not willingly give up their “gains”. Very few people have rational business sense, they would rather chase down the market and lose everything rather than make a huge cut and take in less profit. This part of human nature can be very easily witnessed on the show Deal or No Deal, people get so greedy and go for that “one more time” to make just a little more and then end up losing everything!!!
March 6, 2008 at 9:40 AM #164888kev374Participantpeople will always refuse to lower their price until they are forced to. They will not willingly give up their “gains”. Very few people have rational business sense, they would rather chase down the market and lose everything rather than make a huge cut and take in less profit. This part of human nature can be very easily witnessed on the show Deal or No Deal, people get so greedy and go for that “one more time” to make just a little more and then end up losing everything!!!
March 6, 2008 at 9:50 AM #165318kewpParticipantPeople are still delusional.
Once there is capitulation on the national scale, you will see a rush to the exits like you would not believe.
March 6, 2008 at 9:50 AM #165215kewpParticipantPeople are still delusional.
Once there is capitulation on the national scale, you will see a rush to the exits like you would not believe.
March 6, 2008 at 9:50 AM #164903kewpParticipantPeople are still delusional.
Once there is capitulation on the national scale, you will see a rush to the exits like you would not believe.
March 6, 2008 at 9:50 AM #165224kewpParticipantPeople are still delusional.
Once there is capitulation on the national scale, you will see a rush to the exits like you would not believe.
March 6, 2008 at 9:50 AM #165232kewpParticipantPeople are still delusional.
Once there is capitulation on the national scale, you will see a rush to the exits like you would not believe.
March 6, 2008 at 9:55 AM #165328AecetiaParticipantThe point about artificially propping up the market is an excellent one! This is Darwinian economics at work.
“The understandable impulse to minimize foreclosures should not be a pretext to prop up the housing market by rescuing too many strapped homeowners. Though cruel, foreclosures and falling home values have the virtue of bringing prices to a level where housing can escape its present stagnation. Helping today’s homeowners makes little sense if it penalizes tomorrow’s homeowners. An unstoppable free fall of prices seems unlikely. Slumping home construction and sales have left much pent-up demand. What will release that demand are affordable prices.”
March 6, 2008 at 9:55 AM #164912AecetiaParticipantThe point about artificially propping up the market is an excellent one! This is Darwinian economics at work.
“The understandable impulse to minimize foreclosures should not be a pretext to prop up the housing market by rescuing too many strapped homeowners. Though cruel, foreclosures and falling home values have the virtue of bringing prices to a level where housing can escape its present stagnation. Helping today’s homeowners makes little sense if it penalizes tomorrow’s homeowners. An unstoppable free fall of prices seems unlikely. Slumping home construction and sales have left much pent-up demand. What will release that demand are affordable prices.”
March 6, 2008 at 9:55 AM #165225AecetiaParticipantThe point about artificially propping up the market is an excellent one! This is Darwinian economics at work.
“The understandable impulse to minimize foreclosures should not be a pretext to prop up the housing market by rescuing too many strapped homeowners. Though cruel, foreclosures and falling home values have the virtue of bringing prices to a level where housing can escape its present stagnation. Helping today’s homeowners makes little sense if it penalizes tomorrow’s homeowners. An unstoppable free fall of prices seems unlikely. Slumping home construction and sales have left much pent-up demand. What will release that demand are affordable prices.”
March 6, 2008 at 9:55 AM #165234AecetiaParticipantThe point about artificially propping up the market is an excellent one! This is Darwinian economics at work.
“The understandable impulse to minimize foreclosures should not be a pretext to prop up the housing market by rescuing too many strapped homeowners. Though cruel, foreclosures and falling home values have the virtue of bringing prices to a level where housing can escape its present stagnation. Helping today’s homeowners makes little sense if it penalizes tomorrow’s homeowners. An unstoppable free fall of prices seems unlikely. Slumping home construction and sales have left much pent-up demand. What will release that demand are affordable prices.”
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