- This topic has 130 replies, 21 voices, and was last updated 16 years, 9 months ago by barnaby33.
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February 18, 2008 at 9:14 PM #155618February 18, 2008 at 9:44 PM #155280patientlywaitingParticipant
Thanks for posting. This is an important issue that we need to an eye on.
When will we see a bank failure in America? RE will not have hit bottom until we see failures of some financial institutions.
February 18, 2008 at 9:44 PM #155559patientlywaitingParticipantThanks for posting. This is an important issue that we need to an eye on.
When will we see a bank failure in America? RE will not have hit bottom until we see failures of some financial institutions.
February 18, 2008 at 9:44 PM #155566patientlywaitingParticipantThanks for posting. This is an important issue that we need to an eye on.
When will we see a bank failure in America? RE will not have hit bottom until we see failures of some financial institutions.
February 18, 2008 at 9:44 PM #155582patientlywaitingParticipantThanks for posting. This is an important issue that we need to an eye on.
When will we see a bank failure in America? RE will not have hit bottom until we see failures of some financial institutions.
February 18, 2008 at 9:44 PM #155658patientlywaitingParticipantThanks for posting. This is an important issue that we need to an eye on.
When will we see a bank failure in America? RE will not have hit bottom until we see failures of some financial institutions.
February 18, 2008 at 9:51 PM #155290cashflowParticipantThis is the thing that I fear could be the aftermath of this bubble. I really think that the gov’t will do whatever it can to keep the economy from faltering this year-election year-but after Nov, watch out!
February 18, 2008 at 9:51 PM #155570cashflowParticipantThis is the thing that I fear could be the aftermath of this bubble. I really think that the gov’t will do whatever it can to keep the economy from faltering this year-election year-but after Nov, watch out!
February 18, 2008 at 9:51 PM #155576cashflowParticipantThis is the thing that I fear could be the aftermath of this bubble. I really think that the gov’t will do whatever it can to keep the economy from faltering this year-election year-but after Nov, watch out!
February 18, 2008 at 9:51 PM #155592cashflowParticipantThis is the thing that I fear could be the aftermath of this bubble. I really think that the gov’t will do whatever it can to keep the economy from faltering this year-election year-but after Nov, watch out!
February 18, 2008 at 9:51 PM #155668cashflowParticipantThis is the thing that I fear could be the aftermath of this bubble. I really think that the gov’t will do whatever it can to keep the economy from faltering this year-election year-but after Nov, watch out!
February 18, 2008 at 10:51 PM #155325Deal HunterParticipantThe clue to the future of this bubble is to look at who’s still making money amidst all of this, or who is making even more money now. I see it among hard money lenders in small business and real estate. These guys couldn’t compete with no doc loans and low interest rates before. Now, they’re making 18% – 33% on collaterlized loans!
Hard money does not care about your FICO score. They barely care that you have identification, they just want good collateral. It’s only a matter of time before the big banks want in on the action. I think the next hot credit product is the No-FICO 75% LTV loan on real estate, jewelry, retirement fund and even your wages. Not sure how this would work? Go to your local pawn shop.
Banks will charge horrific rates, yet people will eat up this new credit like teenagers at a buffet. It either re-inflate the fizzing bubble we have now, or create a whole new one.
February 18, 2008 at 10:51 PM #155605Deal HunterParticipantThe clue to the future of this bubble is to look at who’s still making money amidst all of this, or who is making even more money now. I see it among hard money lenders in small business and real estate. These guys couldn’t compete with no doc loans and low interest rates before. Now, they’re making 18% – 33% on collaterlized loans!
Hard money does not care about your FICO score. They barely care that you have identification, they just want good collateral. It’s only a matter of time before the big banks want in on the action. I think the next hot credit product is the No-FICO 75% LTV loan on real estate, jewelry, retirement fund and even your wages. Not sure how this would work? Go to your local pawn shop.
Banks will charge horrific rates, yet people will eat up this new credit like teenagers at a buffet. It either re-inflate the fizzing bubble we have now, or create a whole new one.
February 18, 2008 at 10:51 PM #155611Deal HunterParticipantThe clue to the future of this bubble is to look at who’s still making money amidst all of this, or who is making even more money now. I see it among hard money lenders in small business and real estate. These guys couldn’t compete with no doc loans and low interest rates before. Now, they’re making 18% – 33% on collaterlized loans!
Hard money does not care about your FICO score. They barely care that you have identification, they just want good collateral. It’s only a matter of time before the big banks want in on the action. I think the next hot credit product is the No-FICO 75% LTV loan on real estate, jewelry, retirement fund and even your wages. Not sure how this would work? Go to your local pawn shop.
Banks will charge horrific rates, yet people will eat up this new credit like teenagers at a buffet. It either re-inflate the fizzing bubble we have now, or create a whole new one.
February 18, 2008 at 10:51 PM #155627Deal HunterParticipantThe clue to the future of this bubble is to look at who’s still making money amidst all of this, or who is making even more money now. I see it among hard money lenders in small business and real estate. These guys couldn’t compete with no doc loans and low interest rates before. Now, they’re making 18% – 33% on collaterlized loans!
Hard money does not care about your FICO score. They barely care that you have identification, they just want good collateral. It’s only a matter of time before the big banks want in on the action. I think the next hot credit product is the No-FICO 75% LTV loan on real estate, jewelry, retirement fund and even your wages. Not sure how this would work? Go to your local pawn shop.
Banks will charge horrific rates, yet people will eat up this new credit like teenagers at a buffet. It either re-inflate the fizzing bubble we have now, or create a whole new one.
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