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kev374.
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August 20, 2009 at 10:34 PM #16217August 20, 2009 at 10:51 PM #447333
bsrsharma
ParticipantThis is happening in California too. I know a couple who bought in bay area and abandoned a home in Fresno.
This is hilarious:
It is lawless right now in the Wild West. There’s even a real estate agent (and the figures and details are slightly changed here to protect him) whose out-of-town investor demanded that the agent find a way to cover some of the losses he was taking on the $60,000 down payment he’d sunk into a house. So the agent created a separate contract, never shown to the bank, that said the new buyer had to purchase a $60,000 Persian carpet from the seller — a check his mortgage company, which was sucking up hundreds of thousands of dollars in losses on the short sale, would never see. When the buyer — who was happy just to get a deal on the house — asked if the Persian carpet was really worth $60,000, the agent looked at him as if he were insane. “I bought it at Wal-Mart,” the agent told him. Now all the friends of the investor who got his $60,000 back are asking the agent to pull the same scam for them. And he’s doing it.
Since all these banks will be taken over by FDIC and FDIC has to borrow eventually from China, it is time the central bankers got their head examined before buying anymore treasuries!
August 20, 2009 at 10:51 PM #447525bsrsharma
ParticipantThis is happening in California too. I know a couple who bought in bay area and abandoned a home in Fresno.
This is hilarious:
It is lawless right now in the Wild West. There’s even a real estate agent (and the figures and details are slightly changed here to protect him) whose out-of-town investor demanded that the agent find a way to cover some of the losses he was taking on the $60,000 down payment he’d sunk into a house. So the agent created a separate contract, never shown to the bank, that said the new buyer had to purchase a $60,000 Persian carpet from the seller — a check his mortgage company, which was sucking up hundreds of thousands of dollars in losses on the short sale, would never see. When the buyer — who was happy just to get a deal on the house — asked if the Persian carpet was really worth $60,000, the agent looked at him as if he were insane. “I bought it at Wal-Mart,” the agent told him. Now all the friends of the investor who got his $60,000 back are asking the agent to pull the same scam for them. And he’s doing it.
Since all these banks will be taken over by FDIC and FDIC has to borrow eventually from China, it is time the central bankers got their head examined before buying anymore treasuries!
August 20, 2009 at 10:51 PM #447864bsrsharma
ParticipantThis is happening in California too. I know a couple who bought in bay area and abandoned a home in Fresno.
This is hilarious:
It is lawless right now in the Wild West. There’s even a real estate agent (and the figures and details are slightly changed here to protect him) whose out-of-town investor demanded that the agent find a way to cover some of the losses he was taking on the $60,000 down payment he’d sunk into a house. So the agent created a separate contract, never shown to the bank, that said the new buyer had to purchase a $60,000 Persian carpet from the seller — a check his mortgage company, which was sucking up hundreds of thousands of dollars in losses on the short sale, would never see. When the buyer — who was happy just to get a deal on the house — asked if the Persian carpet was really worth $60,000, the agent looked at him as if he were insane. “I bought it at Wal-Mart,” the agent told him. Now all the friends of the investor who got his $60,000 back are asking the agent to pull the same scam for them. And he’s doing it.
Since all these banks will be taken over by FDIC and FDIC has to borrow eventually from China, it is time the central bankers got their head examined before buying anymore treasuries!
August 20, 2009 at 10:51 PM #447934bsrsharma
ParticipantThis is happening in California too. I know a couple who bought in bay area and abandoned a home in Fresno.
This is hilarious:
It is lawless right now in the Wild West. There’s even a real estate agent (and the figures and details are slightly changed here to protect him) whose out-of-town investor demanded that the agent find a way to cover some of the losses he was taking on the $60,000 down payment he’d sunk into a house. So the agent created a separate contract, never shown to the bank, that said the new buyer had to purchase a $60,000 Persian carpet from the seller — a check his mortgage company, which was sucking up hundreds of thousands of dollars in losses on the short sale, would never see. When the buyer — who was happy just to get a deal on the house — asked if the Persian carpet was really worth $60,000, the agent looked at him as if he were insane. “I bought it at Wal-Mart,” the agent told him. Now all the friends of the investor who got his $60,000 back are asking the agent to pull the same scam for them. And he’s doing it.
Since all these banks will be taken over by FDIC and FDIC has to borrow eventually from China, it is time the central bankers got their head examined before buying anymore treasuries!
August 20, 2009 at 10:51 PM #448117bsrsharma
ParticipantThis is happening in California too. I know a couple who bought in bay area and abandoned a home in Fresno.
This is hilarious:
It is lawless right now in the Wild West. There’s even a real estate agent (and the figures and details are slightly changed here to protect him) whose out-of-town investor demanded that the agent find a way to cover some of the losses he was taking on the $60,000 down payment he’d sunk into a house. So the agent created a separate contract, never shown to the bank, that said the new buyer had to purchase a $60,000 Persian carpet from the seller — a check his mortgage company, which was sucking up hundreds of thousands of dollars in losses on the short sale, would never see. When the buyer — who was happy just to get a deal on the house — asked if the Persian carpet was really worth $60,000, the agent looked at him as if he were insane. “I bought it at Wal-Mart,” the agent told him. Now all the friends of the investor who got his $60,000 back are asking the agent to pull the same scam for them. And he’s doing it.
Since all these banks will be taken over by FDIC and FDIC has to borrow eventually from China, it is time the central bankers got their head examined before buying anymore treasuries!
August 21, 2009 at 12:08 PM #447546Casca
ParticipantIt is impossible to defy the economic laws of gravity indefinitely.
August 21, 2009 at 12:08 PM #447736Casca
ParticipantIt is impossible to defy the economic laws of gravity indefinitely.
August 21, 2009 at 12:08 PM #448076Casca
ParticipantIt is impossible to defy the economic laws of gravity indefinitely.
August 21, 2009 at 12:08 PM #448145Casca
ParticipantIt is impossible to defy the economic laws of gravity indefinitely.
August 21, 2009 at 12:08 PM #448327Casca
ParticipantIt is impossible to defy the economic laws of gravity indefinitely.
August 21, 2009 at 12:55 PM #447561kev374
Participantlol, I know someone who has an investment property in vegas that is severely upside down, he stopped making payments and is also renting it out! He plans to drag the issue out with the bank for the maximum amount of time so he can pocket the rent. Unbelievable!
August 21, 2009 at 12:55 PM #447751kev374
Participantlol, I know someone who has an investment property in vegas that is severely upside down, he stopped making payments and is also renting it out! He plans to drag the issue out with the bank for the maximum amount of time so he can pocket the rent. Unbelievable!
August 21, 2009 at 12:55 PM #448091kev374
Participantlol, I know someone who has an investment property in vegas that is severely upside down, he stopped making payments and is also renting it out! He plans to drag the issue out with the bank for the maximum amount of time so he can pocket the rent. Unbelievable!
August 21, 2009 at 12:55 PM #448160kev374
Participantlol, I know someone who has an investment property in vegas that is severely upside down, he stopped making payments and is also renting it out! He plans to drag the issue out with the bank for the maximum amount of time so he can pocket the rent. Unbelievable!
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