- This topic has 320 replies, 33 voices, and was last updated 16 years, 9 months ago by
SD Realtor.
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March 1, 2009 at 7:18 PM #358590March 1, 2009 at 7:36 PM #358025
Eugene
Participant[quote]Okay as I have harped on alot lately, the current market is schizo. I can honestly say I have not seen this much activity for 2-3 years. …[/quote]
IOW, you should have bought two months ago. You’ve missed the bottom, the train has left the station, it’s too late to buy. You might as well sit on the sidelines and enjoy the view.
March 1, 2009 at 7:36 PM #358328Eugene
Participant[quote]Okay as I have harped on alot lately, the current market is schizo. I can honestly say I have not seen this much activity for 2-3 years. …[/quote]
IOW, you should have bought two months ago. You’ve missed the bottom, the train has left the station, it’s too late to buy. You might as well sit on the sidelines and enjoy the view.
March 1, 2009 at 7:36 PM #358468Eugene
Participant[quote]Okay as I have harped on alot lately, the current market is schizo. I can honestly say I have not seen this much activity for 2-3 years. …[/quote]
IOW, you should have bought two months ago. You’ve missed the bottom, the train has left the station, it’s too late to buy. You might as well sit on the sidelines and enjoy the view.
March 1, 2009 at 7:36 PM #358501Eugene
Participant[quote]Okay as I have harped on alot lately, the current market is schizo. I can honestly say I have not seen this much activity for 2-3 years. …[/quote]
IOW, you should have bought two months ago. You’ve missed the bottom, the train has left the station, it’s too late to buy. You might as well sit on the sidelines and enjoy the view.
March 1, 2009 at 7:36 PM #358605Eugene
Participant[quote]Okay as I have harped on alot lately, the current market is schizo. I can honestly say I have not seen this much activity for 2-3 years. …[/quote]
IOW, you should have bought two months ago. You’ve missed the bottom, the train has left the station, it’s too late to buy. You might as well sit on the sidelines and enjoy the view.
March 1, 2009 at 7:43 PM #358030
CoronitaParticipant[quote=nostradamus]
Owners: maybe this is our last-chance rally! Should we sell? Hmmmmm…[/quote]
At the rate this admin is spending, we just have to wait until the USD becomes like the Argentine peso…When it’s $100USD to 1 yen or $100USD to 1 Yuan, or $10 USD to 1 peso, who cares if you still owe $500,000+ USD on a mortgage?, heh heh….
March 1, 2009 at 7:43 PM #358333
CoronitaParticipant[quote=nostradamus]
Owners: maybe this is our last-chance rally! Should we sell? Hmmmmm…[/quote]
At the rate this admin is spending, we just have to wait until the USD becomes like the Argentine peso…When it’s $100USD to 1 yen or $100USD to 1 Yuan, or $10 USD to 1 peso, who cares if you still owe $500,000+ USD on a mortgage?, heh heh….
March 1, 2009 at 7:43 PM #358473
CoronitaParticipant[quote=nostradamus]
Owners: maybe this is our last-chance rally! Should we sell? Hmmmmm…[/quote]
At the rate this admin is spending, we just have to wait until the USD becomes like the Argentine peso…When it’s $100USD to 1 yen or $100USD to 1 Yuan, or $10 USD to 1 peso, who cares if you still owe $500,000+ USD on a mortgage?, heh heh….
March 1, 2009 at 7:43 PM #358506
CoronitaParticipant[quote=nostradamus]
Owners: maybe this is our last-chance rally! Should we sell? Hmmmmm…[/quote]
At the rate this admin is spending, we just have to wait until the USD becomes like the Argentine peso…When it’s $100USD to 1 yen or $100USD to 1 Yuan, or $10 USD to 1 peso, who cares if you still owe $500,000+ USD on a mortgage?, heh heh….
March 1, 2009 at 7:43 PM #358610
CoronitaParticipant[quote=nostradamus]
Owners: maybe this is our last-chance rally! Should we sell? Hmmmmm…[/quote]
At the rate this admin is spending, we just have to wait until the USD becomes like the Argentine peso…When it’s $100USD to 1 yen or $100USD to 1 Yuan, or $10 USD to 1 peso, who cares if you still owe $500,000+ USD on a mortgage?, heh heh….
March 1, 2009 at 7:51 PM #358041AK
ParticipantThanks for the suggestions on bidding strategy. Might be a bit too ballsy for my tastes, but at least I’ll know what I’m up against.
Sometimes it feels like something straight out of 2004. I just happened to drive past two open houses the other day and stopped by to look, even though both were obviously out of my price range.
The first one was downright creepy … cookies, scented candles (warm apple pie, of course), meticulously upgraded, staged to perfection, attended by two perfectly coiffed Realtors(TM) who should probably lay off the salon tans. I kept looking around for the HGTV camera crew.
The second felt more like something out of “King of Cars” … the Realtor(TM) started the conversation with “What kind of monthly payment are you looking at?” then launched into a mathematically questionable spiel about the huge tax benefits I could expect from the mortgage interest deduction. I managed to extricate myself from the jaws of “The Chopper” about the time he used his infallible intuition and years of experience to decide I was just a looky-loo (which I’d stated up front).
I’ve long since given up on anything that “shows well.” I’ll settle for a deal on something that is neither structurally unsound nor a long-term health hazard. But even that won’t be easy to find ๐
March 1, 2009 at 7:51 PM #358343AK
ParticipantThanks for the suggestions on bidding strategy. Might be a bit too ballsy for my tastes, but at least I’ll know what I’m up against.
Sometimes it feels like something straight out of 2004. I just happened to drive past two open houses the other day and stopped by to look, even though both were obviously out of my price range.
The first one was downright creepy … cookies, scented candles (warm apple pie, of course), meticulously upgraded, staged to perfection, attended by two perfectly coiffed Realtors(TM) who should probably lay off the salon tans. I kept looking around for the HGTV camera crew.
The second felt more like something out of “King of Cars” … the Realtor(TM) started the conversation with “What kind of monthly payment are you looking at?” then launched into a mathematically questionable spiel about the huge tax benefits I could expect from the mortgage interest deduction. I managed to extricate myself from the jaws of “The Chopper” about the time he used his infallible intuition and years of experience to decide I was just a looky-loo (which I’d stated up front).
I’ve long since given up on anything that “shows well.” I’ll settle for a deal on something that is neither structurally unsound nor a long-term health hazard. But even that won’t be easy to find ๐
March 1, 2009 at 7:51 PM #358483AK
ParticipantThanks for the suggestions on bidding strategy. Might be a bit too ballsy for my tastes, but at least I’ll know what I’m up against.
Sometimes it feels like something straight out of 2004. I just happened to drive past two open houses the other day and stopped by to look, even though both were obviously out of my price range.
The first one was downright creepy … cookies, scented candles (warm apple pie, of course), meticulously upgraded, staged to perfection, attended by two perfectly coiffed Realtors(TM) who should probably lay off the salon tans. I kept looking around for the HGTV camera crew.
The second felt more like something out of “King of Cars” … the Realtor(TM) started the conversation with “What kind of monthly payment are you looking at?” then launched into a mathematically questionable spiel about the huge tax benefits I could expect from the mortgage interest deduction. I managed to extricate myself from the jaws of “The Chopper” about the time he used his infallible intuition and years of experience to decide I was just a looky-loo (which I’d stated up front).
I’ve long since given up on anything that “shows well.” I’ll settle for a deal on something that is neither structurally unsound nor a long-term health hazard. But even that won’t be easy to find ๐
March 1, 2009 at 7:51 PM #358516AK
ParticipantThanks for the suggestions on bidding strategy. Might be a bit too ballsy for my tastes, but at least I’ll know what I’m up against.
Sometimes it feels like something straight out of 2004. I just happened to drive past two open houses the other day and stopped by to look, even though both were obviously out of my price range.
The first one was downright creepy … cookies, scented candles (warm apple pie, of course), meticulously upgraded, staged to perfection, attended by two perfectly coiffed Realtors(TM) who should probably lay off the salon tans. I kept looking around for the HGTV camera crew.
The second felt more like something out of “King of Cars” … the Realtor(TM) started the conversation with “What kind of monthly payment are you looking at?” then launched into a mathematically questionable spiel about the huge tax benefits I could expect from the mortgage interest deduction. I managed to extricate myself from the jaws of “The Chopper” about the time he used his infallible intuition and years of experience to decide I was just a looky-loo (which I’d stated up front).
I’ve long since given up on anything that “shows well.” I’ll settle for a deal on something that is neither structurally unsound nor a long-term health hazard. But even that won’t be easy to find ๐
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