- This topic has 40 replies, 7 voices, and was last updated 16 years, 10 months ago by patientrenter.
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January 4, 2008 at 6:48 PM #129744January 4, 2008 at 8:38 PM #129720paramountParticipant
My neighbor just did this very thing – well, almost.
He will try to rent his old house out, but he will not sacrifice his new house for the old one.
Can’t cover the expenses? Let it go. That’s the plan.
January 4, 2008 at 8:38 PM #129824paramountParticipantMy neighbor just did this very thing – well, almost.
He will try to rent his old house out, but he will not sacrifice his new house for the old one.
Can’t cover the expenses? Let it go. That’s the plan.
January 4, 2008 at 8:38 PM #129793paramountParticipantMy neighbor just did this very thing – well, almost.
He will try to rent his old house out, but he will not sacrifice his new house for the old one.
Can’t cover the expenses? Let it go. That’s the plan.
January 4, 2008 at 8:38 PM #129727paramountParticipantMy neighbor just did this very thing – well, almost.
He will try to rent his old house out, but he will not sacrifice his new house for the old one.
Can’t cover the expenses? Let it go. That’s the plan.
January 4, 2008 at 8:38 PM #129552paramountParticipantMy neighbor just did this very thing – well, almost.
He will try to rent his old house out, but he will not sacrifice his new house for the old one.
Can’t cover the expenses? Let it go. That’s the plan.
January 4, 2008 at 9:09 PM #129761patientrenterParticipantSo which lending institutions are still offering loans with less than 30% down? Unless they are charging thousands of basis points more than Treasuries annually (and I know they aren’t) then what they are doing, in the face of these obvious (albeit legal) scams?
Short of fairly complete (FHA/FNMA/GNMA…..) nationalization of loan risk, either these scams have to stop, or minimum downpayments will go well beyond 20%.
Patient renter in OC
January 4, 2008 at 9:09 PM #129767patientrenterParticipantSo which lending institutions are still offering loans with less than 30% down? Unless they are charging thousands of basis points more than Treasuries annually (and I know they aren’t) then what they are doing, in the face of these obvious (albeit legal) scams?
Short of fairly complete (FHA/FNMA/GNMA…..) nationalization of loan risk, either these scams have to stop, or minimum downpayments will go well beyond 20%.
Patient renter in OC
January 4, 2008 at 9:09 PM #129591patientrenterParticipantSo which lending institutions are still offering loans with less than 30% down? Unless they are charging thousands of basis points more than Treasuries annually (and I know they aren’t) then what they are doing, in the face of these obvious (albeit legal) scams?
Short of fairly complete (FHA/FNMA/GNMA…..) nationalization of loan risk, either these scams have to stop, or minimum downpayments will go well beyond 20%.
Patient renter in OC
January 4, 2008 at 9:09 PM #129834patientrenterParticipantSo which lending institutions are still offering loans with less than 30% down? Unless they are charging thousands of basis points more than Treasuries annually (and I know they aren’t) then what they are doing, in the face of these obvious (albeit legal) scams?
Short of fairly complete (FHA/FNMA/GNMA…..) nationalization of loan risk, either these scams have to stop, or minimum downpayments will go well beyond 20%.
Patient renter in OC
January 4, 2008 at 9:09 PM #129865patientrenterParticipantSo which lending institutions are still offering loans with less than 30% down? Unless they are charging thousands of basis points more than Treasuries annually (and I know they aren’t) then what they are doing, in the face of these obvious (albeit legal) scams?
Short of fairly complete (FHA/FNMA/GNMA…..) nationalization of loan risk, either these scams have to stop, or minimum downpayments will go well beyond 20%.
Patient renter in OC
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