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AK
ParticipantPart of me is tempted to fly to “the old country,” prostrate myself before the graves of my Commie ancestors, and beg their forgiveness for becoming a patriotic American capitalist. I hope they forgive my youthful ignorance.
Just part of me.
The other part of me lives for the day I see a hanging party televised live on CNBC from Fairfield, Greenwich, or some ritzy Connecticut suburb.
AK
ParticipantPart of me is tempted to fly to “the old country,” prostrate myself before the graves of my Commie ancestors, and beg their forgiveness for becoming a patriotic American capitalist. I hope they forgive my youthful ignorance.
Just part of me.
The other part of me lives for the day I see a hanging party televised live on CNBC from Fairfield, Greenwich, or some ritzy Connecticut suburb.
AK
ParticipantPart of me is tempted to fly to “the old country,” prostrate myself before the graves of my Commie ancestors, and beg their forgiveness for becoming a patriotic American capitalist. I hope they forgive my youthful ignorance.
Just part of me.
The other part of me lives for the day I see a hanging party televised live on CNBC from Fairfield, Greenwich, or some ritzy Connecticut suburb.
AK
ParticipantPart of me is tempted to fly to “the old country,” prostrate myself before the graves of my Commie ancestors, and beg their forgiveness for becoming a patriotic American capitalist. I hope they forgive my youthful ignorance.
Just part of me.
The other part of me lives for the day I see a hanging party televised live on CNBC from Fairfield, Greenwich, or some ritzy Connecticut suburb.
AK
ParticipantPart of me is tempted to fly to “the old country,” prostrate myself before the graves of my Commie ancestors, and beg their forgiveness for becoming a patriotic American capitalist. I hope they forgive my youthful ignorance.
Just part of me.
The other part of me lives for the day I see a hanging party televised live on CNBC from Fairfield, Greenwich, or some ritzy Connecticut suburb.
AK
ParticipantI just searched the database of eligible Fannie-owned properties. Most could be described as “distressing.” Not “distressed” but “distressing.”
AK
ParticipantI just searched the database of eligible Fannie-owned properties. Most could be described as “distressing.” Not “distressed” but “distressing.”
AK
ParticipantI just searched the database of eligible Fannie-owned properties. Most could be described as “distressing.” Not “distressed” but “distressing.”
AK
ParticipantI just searched the database of eligible Fannie-owned properties. Most could be described as “distressing.” Not “distressed” but “distressing.”
AK
ParticipantI just searched the database of eligible Fannie-owned properties. Most could be described as “distressing.” Not “distressed” but “distressing.”
AK
ParticipantParents invested in a condo conversion at the tail end of the ’70s boom. After brief appreciation the market tanked, and comps fell by 40% or so (for those units that actually sold). The seller failed to disclose that the complex was in the middle of a flood zone, which everyone found out the hard way a few years later. By then the lender (a well-known S&L of the era) was the only party left to sue. HOA fees doubled within a few years due to vacant units.
They were able to sell at a break-even price in 1989. Since then the complex has gone through a major boom-bust cycle and comps aren’t that far above 1979 levels.
AK
ParticipantParents invested in a condo conversion at the tail end of the ’70s boom. After brief appreciation the market tanked, and comps fell by 40% or so (for those units that actually sold). The seller failed to disclose that the complex was in the middle of a flood zone, which everyone found out the hard way a few years later. By then the lender (a well-known S&L of the era) was the only party left to sue. HOA fees doubled within a few years due to vacant units.
They were able to sell at a break-even price in 1989. Since then the complex has gone through a major boom-bust cycle and comps aren’t that far above 1979 levels.
AK
ParticipantParents invested in a condo conversion at the tail end of the ’70s boom. After brief appreciation the market tanked, and comps fell by 40% or so (for those units that actually sold). The seller failed to disclose that the complex was in the middle of a flood zone, which everyone found out the hard way a few years later. By then the lender (a well-known S&L of the era) was the only party left to sue. HOA fees doubled within a few years due to vacant units.
They were able to sell at a break-even price in 1989. Since then the complex has gone through a major boom-bust cycle and comps aren’t that far above 1979 levels.
AK
ParticipantParents invested in a condo conversion at the tail end of the ’70s boom. After brief appreciation the market tanked, and comps fell by 40% or so (for those units that actually sold). The seller failed to disclose that the complex was in the middle of a flood zone, which everyone found out the hard way a few years later. By then the lender (a well-known S&L of the era) was the only party left to sue. HOA fees doubled within a few years due to vacant units.
They were able to sell at a break-even price in 1989. Since then the complex has gone through a major boom-bust cycle and comps aren’t that far above 1979 levels.
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