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donaldduckmoore
ParticipantCommon misconception in Americans again, when they are talking about immigration, they are trying to mix legal and illegal immigrants together. I doubt how many illegal immigrants can actually buy houses in the US.
donaldduckmoore
ParticipantCommon misconception in Americans again, when they are talking about immigration, they are trying to mix legal and illegal immigrants together. I doubt how many illegal immigrants can actually buy houses in the US.
donaldduckmoore
ParticipantCommon misconception in Americans again, when they are talking about immigration, they are trying to mix legal and illegal immigrants together. I doubt how many illegal immigrants can actually buy houses in the US.
donaldduckmoore
ParticipantCommon misconception in Americans again, when they are talking about immigration, they are trying to mix legal and illegal immigrants together. I doubt how many illegal immigrants can actually buy houses in the US.
donaldduckmoore
ParticipantCommon misconception in Americans again, when they are talking about immigration, they are trying to mix legal and illegal immigrants together. I doubt how many illegal immigrants can actually buy houses in the US.
April 18, 2008 at 3:16 PM in reply to: For those of you not following. The Shanghai index is at a 52week low, down 49.2% from peak #189893donaldduckmoore
ParticipantOh, I was referring to food price as one of the indicators of inflation. I am not comparing inflation numbers. Inflation number usually does not reflect our daily life price changes. In China, price for cooking oil, for example, has jumped up 30% in 3 weeks.
April 18, 2008 at 3:16 PM in reply to: For those of you not following. The Shanghai index is at a 52week low, down 49.2% from peak #189914donaldduckmoore
ParticipantOh, I was referring to food price as one of the indicators of inflation. I am not comparing inflation numbers. Inflation number usually does not reflect our daily life price changes. In China, price for cooking oil, for example, has jumped up 30% in 3 weeks.
April 18, 2008 at 3:16 PM in reply to: For those of you not following. The Shanghai index is at a 52week low, down 49.2% from peak #189946donaldduckmoore
ParticipantOh, I was referring to food price as one of the indicators of inflation. I am not comparing inflation numbers. Inflation number usually does not reflect our daily life price changes. In China, price for cooking oil, for example, has jumped up 30% in 3 weeks.
April 18, 2008 at 3:16 PM in reply to: For those of you not following. The Shanghai index is at a 52week low, down 49.2% from peak #189956donaldduckmoore
ParticipantOh, I was referring to food price as one of the indicators of inflation. I am not comparing inflation numbers. Inflation number usually does not reflect our daily life price changes. In China, price for cooking oil, for example, has jumped up 30% in 3 weeks.
April 18, 2008 at 3:16 PM in reply to: For those of you not following. The Shanghai index is at a 52week low, down 49.2% from peak #189959donaldduckmoore
ParticipantOh, I was referring to food price as one of the indicators of inflation. I am not comparing inflation numbers. Inflation number usually does not reflect our daily life price changes. In China, price for cooking oil, for example, has jumped up 30% in 3 weeks.
April 18, 2008 at 2:09 PM in reply to: Increasing numbers of Americans are simply walking away from their houses #189839donaldduckmoore
ParticipantIt looks very easy, don’t pay the mortgage and one can go without even leaving the keys.
Here is the link about walk away:
http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/no-one-should-make-easy/
story.aspx?guid=%7B2C56C3A5-46BF-4050-A5F8-1442D8A11E31%7DThis sentence from the article really upsets me “It doesn’t make sense to make payments on a house that isn’t worth as much,” one homeowner says. “It makes more financial sense for us to stop paying — even if that means declaring bankruptcy.”
Who the heck told him/her house price won’t fluctuate? Are agents required to disclose market fluctuation in the buyers form? This is the morality problem I am talking about. Problem is that these people usually don’t have equity in the loan. They walk freely without looking back and they only lose their credit tenure for a few years and that is it. these are the people that should not be allowed to borrow for at least 10 years.
April 18, 2008 at 2:09 PM in reply to: Increasing numbers of Americans are simply walking away from their houses #189858donaldduckmoore
ParticipantIt looks very easy, don’t pay the mortgage and one can go without even leaving the keys.
Here is the link about walk away:
http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/no-one-should-make-easy/
story.aspx?guid=%7B2C56C3A5-46BF-4050-A5F8-1442D8A11E31%7DThis sentence from the article really upsets me “It doesn’t make sense to make payments on a house that isn’t worth as much,” one homeowner says. “It makes more financial sense for us to stop paying — even if that means declaring bankruptcy.”
Who the heck told him/her house price won’t fluctuate? Are agents required to disclose market fluctuation in the buyers form? This is the morality problem I am talking about. Problem is that these people usually don’t have equity in the loan. They walk freely without looking back and they only lose their credit tenure for a few years and that is it. these are the people that should not be allowed to borrow for at least 10 years.
April 18, 2008 at 2:09 PM in reply to: Increasing numbers of Americans are simply walking away from their houses #189891donaldduckmoore
ParticipantIt looks very easy, don’t pay the mortgage and one can go without even leaving the keys.
Here is the link about walk away:
http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/no-one-should-make-easy/
story.aspx?guid=%7B2C56C3A5-46BF-4050-A5F8-1442D8A11E31%7DThis sentence from the article really upsets me “It doesn’t make sense to make payments on a house that isn’t worth as much,” one homeowner says. “It makes more financial sense for us to stop paying — even if that means declaring bankruptcy.”
Who the heck told him/her house price won’t fluctuate? Are agents required to disclose market fluctuation in the buyers form? This is the morality problem I am talking about. Problem is that these people usually don’t have equity in the loan. They walk freely without looking back and they only lose their credit tenure for a few years and that is it. these are the people that should not be allowed to borrow for at least 10 years.
April 18, 2008 at 2:09 PM in reply to: Increasing numbers of Americans are simply walking away from their houses #189902donaldduckmoore
ParticipantIt looks very easy, don’t pay the mortgage and one can go without even leaving the keys.
Here is the link about walk away:
http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/no-one-should-make-easy/
story.aspx?guid=%7B2C56C3A5-46BF-4050-A5F8-1442D8A11E31%7DThis sentence from the article really upsets me “It doesn’t make sense to make payments on a house that isn’t worth as much,” one homeowner says. “It makes more financial sense for us to stop paying — even if that means declaring bankruptcy.”
Who the heck told him/her house price won’t fluctuate? Are agents required to disclose market fluctuation in the buyers form? This is the morality problem I am talking about. Problem is that these people usually don’t have equity in the loan. They walk freely without looking back and they only lose their credit tenure for a few years and that is it. these are the people that should not be allowed to borrow for at least 10 years.
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