- This topic has 180 replies, 20 voices, and was last updated 16 years, 8 months ago by hipmatt.
-
AuthorPosts
-
March 13, 2008 at 1:34 AM #168869March 13, 2008 at 2:36 AM #168453djcParticipant
Yes, shame on all you people who didn’t buy assets they couldn’t afford like everyone else. How dare you act responsibly!
Your greed disgusts me also. Those poor homeowners losing their house since they couldn’t flip their ‘investment’ properties weren’t greedy, they were looking to get ahead.
shame shame shame
March 13, 2008 at 2:36 AM #168784djcParticipantYes, shame on all you people who didn’t buy assets they couldn’t afford like everyone else. How dare you act responsibly!
Your greed disgusts me also. Those poor homeowners losing their house since they couldn’t flip their ‘investment’ properties weren’t greedy, they were looking to get ahead.
shame shame shame
March 13, 2008 at 2:36 AM #168786djcParticipantYes, shame on all you people who didn’t buy assets they couldn’t afford like everyone else. How dare you act responsibly!
Your greed disgusts me also. Those poor homeowners losing their house since they couldn’t flip their ‘investment’ properties weren’t greedy, they were looking to get ahead.
shame shame shame
March 13, 2008 at 2:36 AM #168814djcParticipantYes, shame on all you people who didn’t buy assets they couldn’t afford like everyone else. How dare you act responsibly!
Your greed disgusts me also. Those poor homeowners losing their house since they couldn’t flip their ‘investment’ properties weren’t greedy, they were looking to get ahead.
shame shame shame
March 13, 2008 at 2:36 AM #168889djcParticipantYes, shame on all you people who didn’t buy assets they couldn’t afford like everyone else. How dare you act responsibly!
Your greed disgusts me also. Those poor homeowners losing their house since they couldn’t flip their ‘investment’ properties weren’t greedy, they were looking to get ahead.
shame shame shame
March 13, 2008 at 12:11 PM #168735ctlmdjbParticipantOK here’s a question. I’d love to participate in the next housing price re-bound….where else can I get an asset where the bank will leverage 80% of the money and it generates a cash-flow that covers my investment from day one?
But I don’t want to be a landlord – been there done that, it’s a pain in the a**. Every week something goes wrong, every week hassle of fixing this, doing that.
So who can I buy shares in that professionally manages property and where the value of the company increases with the value of the property owned? I want to buy shares in a property management company that is smartly investing as we hit the low point of the cycle, not buy and manage property myself.
Thoughts?
March 13, 2008 at 12:11 PM #169069ctlmdjbParticipantOK here’s a question. I’d love to participate in the next housing price re-bound….where else can I get an asset where the bank will leverage 80% of the money and it generates a cash-flow that covers my investment from day one?
But I don’t want to be a landlord – been there done that, it’s a pain in the a**. Every week something goes wrong, every week hassle of fixing this, doing that.
So who can I buy shares in that professionally manages property and where the value of the company increases with the value of the property owned? I want to buy shares in a property management company that is smartly investing as we hit the low point of the cycle, not buy and manage property myself.
Thoughts?
March 13, 2008 at 12:11 PM #169074ctlmdjbParticipantOK here’s a question. I’d love to participate in the next housing price re-bound….where else can I get an asset where the bank will leverage 80% of the money and it generates a cash-flow that covers my investment from day one?
But I don’t want to be a landlord – been there done that, it’s a pain in the a**. Every week something goes wrong, every week hassle of fixing this, doing that.
So who can I buy shares in that professionally manages property and where the value of the company increases with the value of the property owned? I want to buy shares in a property management company that is smartly investing as we hit the low point of the cycle, not buy and manage property myself.
Thoughts?
March 13, 2008 at 12:11 PM #169095ctlmdjbParticipantOK here’s a question. I’d love to participate in the next housing price re-bound….where else can I get an asset where the bank will leverage 80% of the money and it generates a cash-flow that covers my investment from day one?
But I don’t want to be a landlord – been there done that, it’s a pain in the a**. Every week something goes wrong, every week hassle of fixing this, doing that.
So who can I buy shares in that professionally manages property and where the value of the company increases with the value of the property owned? I want to buy shares in a property management company that is smartly investing as we hit the low point of the cycle, not buy and manage property myself.
Thoughts?
March 13, 2008 at 12:11 PM #169172ctlmdjbParticipantOK here’s a question. I’d love to participate in the next housing price re-bound….where else can I get an asset where the bank will leverage 80% of the money and it generates a cash-flow that covers my investment from day one?
But I don’t want to be a landlord – been there done that, it’s a pain in the a**. Every week something goes wrong, every week hassle of fixing this, doing that.
So who can I buy shares in that professionally manages property and where the value of the company increases with the value of the property owned? I want to buy shares in a property management company that is smartly investing as we hit the low point of the cycle, not buy and manage property myself.
Thoughts?
March 13, 2008 at 7:08 PM #169071hipmattParticipantI know the guy who bought the first home that TG listed. He is a great guy who can easily afford the home and has a great job, income, and down payment. The second listing is smoking crack.
March 13, 2008 at 7:08 PM #169404hipmattParticipantI know the guy who bought the first home that TG listed. He is a great guy who can easily afford the home and has a great job, income, and down payment. The second listing is smoking crack.
March 13, 2008 at 7:08 PM #169407hipmattParticipantI know the guy who bought the first home that TG listed. He is a great guy who can easily afford the home and has a great job, income, and down payment. The second listing is smoking crack.
March 13, 2008 at 7:08 PM #169430hipmattParticipantI know the guy who bought the first home that TG listed. He is a great guy who can easily afford the home and has a great job, income, and down payment. The second listing is smoking crack.
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.