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January 14, 2008 at 10:45 AM #11501January 14, 2008 at 11:06 AM #135505LA_RenterParticipant
This is the key development that I am paying attention to this year. Now we are starting to move up the food chain into the more desirable neighborhoods.
January 14, 2008 at 11:06 AM #135702LA_RenterParticipantThis is the key development that I am paying attention to this year. Now we are starting to move up the food chain into the more desirable neighborhoods.
January 14, 2008 at 11:06 AM #135706LA_RenterParticipantThis is the key development that I am paying attention to this year. Now we are starting to move up the food chain into the more desirable neighborhoods.
January 14, 2008 at 11:06 AM #135764LA_RenterParticipantThis is the key development that I am paying attention to this year. Now we are starting to move up the food chain into the more desirable neighborhoods.
January 14, 2008 at 11:06 AM #135804LA_RenterParticipantThis is the key development that I am paying attention to this year. Now we are starting to move up the food chain into the more desirable neighborhoods.
January 14, 2008 at 3:12 PM #135650crParticipantAgreed. Bubble naysayers, if they even exist anymore, always said LA was immune form this – I see more foreclosures in my “insulated” neighborhood every week.
One thing irritates me about this article though aside from it not specifically mentioning L.A. yet, and it’s this:
“It took me and everybody else by surprise.”
Maybe the rate is quicker than some expected, but certainly not all, and it happeneing at all is no surprise, people just didn’t want to hear it. But with people paying 10-12 times their income for a home, and not even paying the full interest, no fallout should be a surprise.
January 14, 2008 at 3:12 PM #135847crParticipantAgreed. Bubble naysayers, if they even exist anymore, always said LA was immune form this – I see more foreclosures in my “insulated” neighborhood every week.
One thing irritates me about this article though aside from it not specifically mentioning L.A. yet, and it’s this:
“It took me and everybody else by surprise.”
Maybe the rate is quicker than some expected, but certainly not all, and it happeneing at all is no surprise, people just didn’t want to hear it. But with people paying 10-12 times their income for a home, and not even paying the full interest, no fallout should be a surprise.
January 14, 2008 at 3:12 PM #135850crParticipantAgreed. Bubble naysayers, if they even exist anymore, always said LA was immune form this – I see more foreclosures in my “insulated” neighborhood every week.
One thing irritates me about this article though aside from it not specifically mentioning L.A. yet, and it’s this:
“It took me and everybody else by surprise.”
Maybe the rate is quicker than some expected, but certainly not all, and it happeneing at all is no surprise, people just didn’t want to hear it. But with people paying 10-12 times their income for a home, and not even paying the full interest, no fallout should be a surprise.
January 14, 2008 at 3:12 PM #135908crParticipantAgreed. Bubble naysayers, if they even exist anymore, always said LA was immune form this – I see more foreclosures in my “insulated” neighborhood every week.
One thing irritates me about this article though aside from it not specifically mentioning L.A. yet, and it’s this:
“It took me and everybody else by surprise.”
Maybe the rate is quicker than some expected, but certainly not all, and it happeneing at all is no surprise, people just didn’t want to hear it. But with people paying 10-12 times their income for a home, and not even paying the full interest, no fallout should be a surprise.
January 14, 2008 at 3:12 PM #135951crParticipantAgreed. Bubble naysayers, if they even exist anymore, always said LA was immune form this – I see more foreclosures in my “insulated” neighborhood every week.
One thing irritates me about this article though aside from it not specifically mentioning L.A. yet, and it’s this:
“It took me and everybody else by surprise.”
Maybe the rate is quicker than some expected, but certainly not all, and it happeneing at all is no surprise, people just didn’t want to hear it. But with people paying 10-12 times their income for a home, and not even paying the full interest, no fallout should be a surprise.
January 14, 2008 at 5:01 PM #135705Pasadena BrokerParticipant“It took me and everybody else by surprise.”
Kind of like when a smoker gets lung cancer, or an alcoholic has kidney failure.
January 14, 2008 at 5:01 PM #135902Pasadena BrokerParticipant“It took me and everybody else by surprise.”
Kind of like when a smoker gets lung cancer, or an alcoholic has kidney failure.
January 14, 2008 at 5:01 PM #135905Pasadena BrokerParticipant“It took me and everybody else by surprise.”
Kind of like when a smoker gets lung cancer, or an alcoholic has kidney failure.
January 14, 2008 at 5:01 PM #135963Pasadena BrokerParticipant“It took me and everybody else by surprise.”
Kind of like when a smoker gets lung cancer, or an alcoholic has kidney failure.
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