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cv2Participant
US has enjoyed a world dominance for the past sixty plus years since WWII. I hope this is not the end to it. On the other hand, if its citizens are poor (living on credit cards, HELOC ATM machines), the country although still strong right now, will inevitably go downhill before its turn for world dominance again.
Thoughts?
cv2ParticipantIn good times, like the boom times two, three years ago, everybody want their own dig. In bad times, people hunk down together by double up or move back to parent’s house. Right now we are either in a slow down or recession depend on who you talk to, vacancy will be even worse.
But you are saying that even during good times, there are lots of empty units. Is it possible that we have more home than people forever? We need either foreign investors or illegal aliens to fill them up?
cv2ParticipantIn good times, like the boom times two, three years ago, everybody want their own dig. In bad times, people hunk down together by double up or move back to parent’s house. Right now we are either in a slow down or recession depend on who you talk to, vacancy will be even worse.
But you are saying that even during good times, there are lots of empty units. Is it possible that we have more home than people forever? We need either foreign investors or illegal aliens to fill them up?
cv2ParticipantIn good times, like the boom times two, three years ago, everybody want their own dig. In bad times, people hunk down together by double up or move back to parent’s house. Right now we are either in a slow down or recession depend on who you talk to, vacancy will be even worse.
But you are saying that even during good times, there are lots of empty units. Is it possible that we have more home than people forever? We need either foreign investors or illegal aliens to fill them up?
cv2ParticipantIn good times, like the boom times two, three years ago, everybody want their own dig. In bad times, people hunk down together by double up or move back to parent’s house. Right now we are either in a slow down or recession depend on who you talk to, vacancy will be even worse.
But you are saying that even during good times, there are lots of empty units. Is it possible that we have more home than people forever? We need either foreign investors or illegal aliens to fill them up?
cv2ParticipantIn good times, like the boom times two, three years ago, everybody want their own dig. In bad times, people hunk down together by double up or move back to parent’s house. Right now we are either in a slow down or recession depend on who you talk to, vacancy will be even worse.
But you are saying that even during good times, there are lots of empty units. Is it possible that we have more home than people forever? We need either foreign investors or illegal aliens to fill them up?
cv2Participant$90 per square feet in Murietta
Is this below the construction cost?
There were a discussion on what’s the real construction cost. I understand that for newer homes has to meet newer safety/fire standard but that won’t add much, at most $20/sf to the construction cost. Does anybody know what’s the current construction cost per square feet?
cv2Participant$90 per square feet in Murietta
Is this below the construction cost?
There were a discussion on what’s the real construction cost. I understand that for newer homes has to meet newer safety/fire standard but that won’t add much, at most $20/sf to the construction cost. Does anybody know what’s the current construction cost per square feet?
cv2Participant$90 per square feet in Murietta
Is this below the construction cost?
There were a discussion on what’s the real construction cost. I understand that for newer homes has to meet newer safety/fire standard but that won’t add much, at most $20/sf to the construction cost. Does anybody know what’s the current construction cost per square feet?
cv2Participant$90 per square feet in Murietta
Is this below the construction cost?
There were a discussion on what’s the real construction cost. I understand that for newer homes has to meet newer safety/fire standard but that won’t add much, at most $20/sf to the construction cost. Does anybody know what’s the current construction cost per square feet?
cv2Participant$90 per square feet in Murietta
Is this below the construction cost?
There were a discussion on what’s the real construction cost. I understand that for newer homes has to meet newer safety/fire standard but that won’t add much, at most $20/sf to the construction cost. Does anybody know what’s the current construction cost per square feet?
May 16, 2008 at 9:40 AM in reply to: Buying “mortgages gone sour” for pennies on the dollar… #205793cv2ParticipantHi HLS,
Where can I find the list of loans from servicers as mentioned in the story? Can anybody bid on those loans?
Since you are in these kind of business, if you start a company doing this, I would be interested in participating.
May 16, 2008 at 9:40 AM in reply to: Buying “mortgages gone sour” for pennies on the dollar… #205846cv2ParticipantHi HLS,
Where can I find the list of loans from servicers as mentioned in the story? Can anybody bid on those loans?
Since you are in these kind of business, if you start a company doing this, I would be interested in participating.
May 16, 2008 at 9:40 AM in reply to: Buying “mortgages gone sour” for pennies on the dollar… #205872cv2ParticipantHi HLS,
Where can I find the list of loans from servicers as mentioned in the story? Can anybody bid on those loans?
Since you are in these kind of business, if you start a company doing this, I would be interested in participating.
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