- This topic has 10 replies, 3 voices, and was last updated 16 years, 7 months ago by DWCAP.
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April 10, 2008 at 6:10 PM #12395April 11, 2008 at 2:54 PM #185090donaldduckmooreParticipant
not sure when this is going to take effect, but $7000 tax credit is not that attractive to homebuyers. $15000 is more eye-popping and will draw more attention.
April 11, 2008 at 2:54 PM #185105donaldduckmooreParticipantnot sure when this is going to take effect, but $7000 tax credit is not that attractive to homebuyers. $15000 is more eye-popping and will draw more attention.
April 11, 2008 at 2:54 PM #185133donaldduckmooreParticipantnot sure when this is going to take effect, but $7000 tax credit is not that attractive to homebuyers. $15000 is more eye-popping and will draw more attention.
April 11, 2008 at 2:54 PM #185141donaldduckmooreParticipantnot sure when this is going to take effect, but $7000 tax credit is not that attractive to homebuyers. $15000 is more eye-popping and will draw more attention.
April 11, 2008 at 2:54 PM #185144donaldduckmooreParticipantnot sure when this is going to take effect, but $7000 tax credit is not that attractive to homebuyers. $15000 is more eye-popping and will draw more attention.
April 11, 2008 at 3:05 PM #185098DWCAPParticipantWhen you can buy a house in Detroit or other rust belt areas for a song (what 50-70k?) that is over 10% of the purchase price. I think people there will sit up and take notice. In SoCal, where anything someone who qualifies in todays market may actually want to own costs over 250k it is kinda oh hum. The idea is more to make people THINK they are getting a deal and therefore they buy when otherwise they wouldnt and so we end the murder (self inflicted) of the banks.
April 11, 2008 at 3:05 PM #185115DWCAPParticipantWhen you can buy a house in Detroit or other rust belt areas for a song (what 50-70k?) that is over 10% of the purchase price. I think people there will sit up and take notice. In SoCal, where anything someone who qualifies in todays market may actually want to own costs over 250k it is kinda oh hum. The idea is more to make people THINK they are getting a deal and therefore they buy when otherwise they wouldnt and so we end the murder (self inflicted) of the banks.
April 11, 2008 at 3:05 PM #185143DWCAPParticipantWhen you can buy a house in Detroit or other rust belt areas for a song (what 50-70k?) that is over 10% of the purchase price. I think people there will sit up and take notice. In SoCal, where anything someone who qualifies in todays market may actually want to own costs over 250k it is kinda oh hum. The idea is more to make people THINK they are getting a deal and therefore they buy when otherwise they wouldnt and so we end the murder (self inflicted) of the banks.
April 11, 2008 at 3:05 PM #185152DWCAPParticipantWhen you can buy a house in Detroit or other rust belt areas for a song (what 50-70k?) that is over 10% of the purchase price. I think people there will sit up and take notice. In SoCal, where anything someone who qualifies in todays market may actually want to own costs over 250k it is kinda oh hum. The idea is more to make people THINK they are getting a deal and therefore they buy when otherwise they wouldnt and so we end the murder (self inflicted) of the banks.
April 11, 2008 at 3:05 PM #185154DWCAPParticipantWhen you can buy a house in Detroit or other rust belt areas for a song (what 50-70k?) that is over 10% of the purchase price. I think people there will sit up and take notice. In SoCal, where anything someone who qualifies in todays market may actually want to own costs over 250k it is kinda oh hum. The idea is more to make people THINK they are getting a deal and therefore they buy when otherwise they wouldnt and so we end the murder (self inflicted) of the banks.
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