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April 15, 2008 at 6:36 PM #187893April 15, 2008 at 6:41 PM #187920equalizerParticipant
I get this vibe that most on the coast have already refinanced, so the coast will get immunity once again.
April 15, 2008 at 6:41 PM #187949equalizerParticipantI get this vibe that most on the coast have already refinanced, so the coast will get immunity once again.
April 15, 2008 at 6:41 PM #187898equalizerParticipantI get this vibe that most on the coast have already refinanced, so the coast will get immunity once again.
April 15, 2008 at 6:41 PM #187962equalizerParticipantI get this vibe that most on the coast have already refinanced, so the coast will get immunity once again.
April 15, 2008 at 6:41 PM #187966equalizerParticipantI get this vibe that most on the coast have already refinanced, so the coast will get immunity once again.
April 15, 2008 at 7:30 PM #188007BugsParticipantThis article points out exactly why I think the upper end will get nailed just as hard as the bottom end has been getting over the last couple years. These were the loans of choice throughout Bressi Ranch, La Costa Greens, 4S Ranch, Santaluz and Carmel Valley.
Five years from now when someone reminisces about “I used to own a $1,400,000 tract home in Carlsbad” people are going to wonder aloud at their stupidity.
April 15, 2008 at 7:30 PM #188002BugsParticipantThis article points out exactly why I think the upper end will get nailed just as hard as the bottom end has been getting over the last couple years. These were the loans of choice throughout Bressi Ranch, La Costa Greens, 4S Ranch, Santaluz and Carmel Valley.
Five years from now when someone reminisces about “I used to own a $1,400,000 tract home in Carlsbad” people are going to wonder aloud at their stupidity.
April 15, 2008 at 7:30 PM #187992BugsParticipantThis article points out exactly why I think the upper end will get nailed just as hard as the bottom end has been getting over the last couple years. These were the loans of choice throughout Bressi Ranch, La Costa Greens, 4S Ranch, Santaluz and Carmel Valley.
Five years from now when someone reminisces about “I used to own a $1,400,000 tract home in Carlsbad” people are going to wonder aloud at their stupidity.
April 15, 2008 at 7:30 PM #187938BugsParticipantThis article points out exactly why I think the upper end will get nailed just as hard as the bottom end has been getting over the last couple years. These were the loans of choice throughout Bressi Ranch, La Costa Greens, 4S Ranch, Santaluz and Carmel Valley.
Five years from now when someone reminisces about “I used to own a $1,400,000 tract home in Carlsbad” people are going to wonder aloud at their stupidity.
April 15, 2008 at 7:30 PM #187960BugsParticipantThis article points out exactly why I think the upper end will get nailed just as hard as the bottom end has been getting over the last couple years. These were the loans of choice throughout Bressi Ranch, La Costa Greens, 4S Ranch, Santaluz and Carmel Valley.
Five years from now when someone reminisces about “I used to own a $1,400,000 tract home in Carlsbad” people are going to wonder aloud at their stupidity.
April 16, 2008 at 10:22 AM #188300crParticipantAs Rich alluded to in a recent article the higher end areas weren’t necessarily all bought into by the upper class millionaires. Many were middle class families who suddenly attained the American Dream of being rich because their equity doubled, so they went out a bought an even bigger house.
There’s no reason to think any place is immune in this downturn, particularly since we are only now seeing the spillover effects that a year ago BB said were non-existant.
Subprime was such a disaster MSM and all the “experts” thought that was the extend of the problem. “Prime” will probably dwarf sub-prime.
April 16, 2008 at 10:22 AM #188318crParticipantAs Rich alluded to in a recent article the higher end areas weren’t necessarily all bought into by the upper class millionaires. Many were middle class families who suddenly attained the American Dream of being rich because their equity doubled, so they went out a bought an even bigger house.
There’s no reason to think any place is immune in this downturn, particularly since we are only now seeing the spillover effects that a year ago BB said were non-existant.
Subprime was such a disaster MSM and all the “experts” thought that was the extend of the problem. “Prime” will probably dwarf sub-prime.
April 16, 2008 at 10:22 AM #188351crParticipantAs Rich alluded to in a recent article the higher end areas weren’t necessarily all bought into by the upper class millionaires. Many were middle class families who suddenly attained the American Dream of being rich because their equity doubled, so they went out a bought an even bigger house.
There’s no reason to think any place is immune in this downturn, particularly since we are only now seeing the spillover effects that a year ago BB said were non-existant.
Subprime was such a disaster MSM and all the “experts” thought that was the extend of the problem. “Prime” will probably dwarf sub-prime.
April 16, 2008 at 10:22 AM #188362crParticipantAs Rich alluded to in a recent article the higher end areas weren’t necessarily all bought into by the upper class millionaires. Many were middle class families who suddenly attained the American Dream of being rich because their equity doubled, so they went out a bought an even bigger house.
There’s no reason to think any place is immune in this downturn, particularly since we are only now seeing the spillover effects that a year ago BB said were non-existant.
Subprime was such a disaster MSM and all the “experts” thought that was the extend of the problem. “Prime” will probably dwarf sub-prime.
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