- This topic has 80 replies, 8 voices, and was last updated 14 years, 9 months ago by outtamojo.
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February 11, 2010 at 11:03 AM #512061February 11, 2010 at 11:12 AM #512219outtamojoParticipant
[quote=briansd1][quote=outtamojo][quote=briansd1]outtamojo, isn’t that what you want?
[/quote]
ROFLMAO. Whatever gave you that idea?[/quote]
“You’ve been hoping for something to save the market. ”
Same question: whatever gave you THAT idea?
“The buyers who bought at the peak won’t be saved from a recovery from the bottom, they need a return to peak plus even more appreciation to recover their money.”
Whatever gave you the idea I thought different than this?
February 11, 2010 at 11:12 AM #512635outtamojoParticipant[quote=briansd1][quote=outtamojo][quote=briansd1]outtamojo, isn’t that what you want?
[/quote]
ROFLMAO. Whatever gave you that idea?[/quote]
“You’ve been hoping for something to save the market. ”
Same question: whatever gave you THAT idea?
“The buyers who bought at the peak won’t be saved from a recovery from the bottom, they need a return to peak plus even more appreciation to recover their money.”
Whatever gave you the idea I thought different than this?
February 11, 2010 at 11:12 AM #512727outtamojoParticipant[quote=briansd1][quote=outtamojo][quote=briansd1]outtamojo, isn’t that what you want?
[/quote]
ROFLMAO. Whatever gave you that idea?[/quote]
“You’ve been hoping for something to save the market. ”
Same question: whatever gave you THAT idea?
“The buyers who bought at the peak won’t be saved from a recovery from the bottom, they need a return to peak plus even more appreciation to recover their money.”
Whatever gave you the idea I thought different than this?
February 11, 2010 at 11:12 AM #512979outtamojoParticipant[quote=briansd1][quote=outtamojo][quote=briansd1]outtamojo, isn’t that what you want?
[/quote]
ROFLMAO. Whatever gave you that idea?[/quote]
“You’ve been hoping for something to save the market. ”
Same question: whatever gave you THAT idea?
“The buyers who bought at the peak won’t be saved from a recovery from the bottom, they need a return to peak plus even more appreciation to recover their money.”
Whatever gave you the idea I thought different than this?
February 11, 2010 at 11:12 AM #512072outtamojoParticipant[quote=briansd1][quote=outtamojo][quote=briansd1]outtamojo, isn’t that what you want?
[/quote]
ROFLMAO. Whatever gave you that idea?[/quote]
“You’ve been hoping for something to save the market. ”
Same question: whatever gave you THAT idea?
“The buyers who bought at the peak won’t be saved from a recovery from the bottom, they need a return to peak plus even more appreciation to recover their money.”
Whatever gave you the idea I thought different than this?
February 11, 2010 at 11:43 AM #512995DWCAPParticipantI still think the bottom wont come in until morgage rates start to rise higher than about 5.75%. That is a full point above the low, and where alot of people will be forced to start recognizing that rates will go up. Then the ARMs that are living on borrowed time will hit the market and you will see the ‘flushing’.
Dont hold your breath. Bernakie seems to have not learned anything from the last time they tried to use accomidative financial policy to fix unemployment. He’ll default lower rather than higher and blow another bubble and not see it coming.
February 11, 2010 at 11:43 AM #512742DWCAPParticipantI still think the bottom wont come in until morgage rates start to rise higher than about 5.75%. That is a full point above the low, and where alot of people will be forced to start recognizing that rates will go up. Then the ARMs that are living on borrowed time will hit the market and you will see the ‘flushing’.
Dont hold your breath. Bernakie seems to have not learned anything from the last time they tried to use accomidative financial policy to fix unemployment. He’ll default lower rather than higher and blow another bubble and not see it coming.
February 11, 2010 at 11:43 AM #512087DWCAPParticipantI still think the bottom wont come in until morgage rates start to rise higher than about 5.75%. That is a full point above the low, and where alot of people will be forced to start recognizing that rates will go up. Then the ARMs that are living on borrowed time will hit the market and you will see the ‘flushing’.
Dont hold your breath. Bernakie seems to have not learned anything from the last time they tried to use accomidative financial policy to fix unemployment. He’ll default lower rather than higher and blow another bubble and not see it coming.
February 11, 2010 at 11:43 AM #512650DWCAPParticipantI still think the bottom wont come in until morgage rates start to rise higher than about 5.75%. That is a full point above the low, and where alot of people will be forced to start recognizing that rates will go up. Then the ARMs that are living on borrowed time will hit the market and you will see the ‘flushing’.
Dont hold your breath. Bernakie seems to have not learned anything from the last time they tried to use accomidative financial policy to fix unemployment. He’ll default lower rather than higher and blow another bubble and not see it coming.
February 11, 2010 at 11:43 AM #512234DWCAPParticipantI still think the bottom wont come in until morgage rates start to rise higher than about 5.75%. That is a full point above the low, and where alot of people will be forced to start recognizing that rates will go up. Then the ARMs that are living on borrowed time will hit the market and you will see the ‘flushing’.
Dont hold your breath. Bernakie seems to have not learned anything from the last time they tried to use accomidative financial policy to fix unemployment. He’ll default lower rather than higher and blow another bubble and not see it coming.
February 11, 2010 at 12:36 PM #512107briansd1Guestouttamojo, sorry if I was mistaken.
February 11, 2010 at 12:36 PM #512762briansd1Guestouttamojo, sorry if I was mistaken.
February 11, 2010 at 12:36 PM #512670briansd1Guestouttamojo, sorry if I was mistaken.
February 11, 2010 at 12:36 PM #512254briansd1Guestouttamojo, sorry if I was mistaken.
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