Forum Replies Created
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AuthorPosts
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Doofrat
ParticipantI love how they want to take Detroit’s (and other area’s like it) data out of the national average because it’s “local”.
This “article” has everything in it:
Finger pointing at the media
General statements about people still buying and selling and how “business, outside the financial, real estate, and construction sectors, is booming”
– Yeah forget those inconsequential little finance, real estate, and construction sectors.A straight line calculation of past gains projected twenty years into the future.
Then they flat out say that you should “invest” in Real Estate instead of the stock market.
Yep, this article’s a keeper.
Doofrat
ParticipantI love how they want to take Detroit’s (and other area’s like it) data out of the national average because it’s “local”.
This “article” has everything in it:
Finger pointing at the media
General statements about people still buying and selling and how “business, outside the financial, real estate, and construction sectors, is booming”
– Yeah forget those inconsequential little finance, real estate, and construction sectors.A straight line calculation of past gains projected twenty years into the future.
Then they flat out say that you should “invest” in Real Estate instead of the stock market.
Yep, this article’s a keeper.
Doofrat
ParticipantI love how they want to take Detroit’s (and other area’s like it) data out of the national average because it’s “local”.
This “article” has everything in it:
Finger pointing at the media
General statements about people still buying and selling and how “business, outside the financial, real estate, and construction sectors, is booming”
– Yeah forget those inconsequential little finance, real estate, and construction sectors.A straight line calculation of past gains projected twenty years into the future.
Then they flat out say that you should “invest” in Real Estate instead of the stock market.
Yep, this article’s a keeper.
Doofrat
ParticipantI love how they want to take Detroit’s (and other area’s like it) data out of the national average because it’s “local”.
This “article” has everything in it:
Finger pointing at the media
General statements about people still buying and selling and how “business, outside the financial, real estate, and construction sectors, is booming”
– Yeah forget those inconsequential little finance, real estate, and construction sectors.A straight line calculation of past gains projected twenty years into the future.
Then they flat out say that you should “invest” in Real Estate instead of the stock market.
Yep, this article’s a keeper.
Doofrat
ParticipantI love how they want to take Detroit’s (and other area’s like it) data out of the national average because it’s “local”.
This “article” has everything in it:
Finger pointing at the media
General statements about people still buying and selling and how “business, outside the financial, real estate, and construction sectors, is booming”
– Yeah forget those inconsequential little finance, real estate, and construction sectors.A straight line calculation of past gains projected twenty years into the future.
Then they flat out say that you should “invest” in Real Estate instead of the stock market.
Yep, this article’s a keeper.
Doofrat
ParticipantA friend posted.. it wasn’t you… huh. Why don’t you have a seat over there.
Chris Hanson
Doofrat
ParticipantA friend posted.. it wasn’t you… huh. Why don’t you have a seat over there.
Chris Hanson
Doofrat
ParticipantA friend posted.. it wasn’t you… huh. Why don’t you have a seat over there.
Chris Hanson
Doofrat
ParticipantA friend posted.. it wasn’t you… huh. Why don’t you have a seat over there.
Chris Hanson
Doofrat
ParticipantA friend posted.. it wasn’t you… huh. Why don’t you have a seat over there.
Chris Hanson
Doofrat
ParticipantHousing slumps tend to travel from the suburbs (or super suburbs, or super super suburbs out there in Death Valley or wherever the new developments are now) in towards the city centers in general with the least desirable housing (condos, townhomes, apt. conversions, cracker box houses in bad areas) falling the hardest. It’ll catch up to these areas at some point, but the gas prices can’t be helping much, so it’ll probably slow the decline in the prime central areas IMO.
It’s funny to see people talking about how the areas closer to the golden triangle and downtown haven’t declined as if they are immune somehow. If you read about downturns, it’s totally expected just like the bubble burst was.
Doofrat
ParticipantHousing slumps tend to travel from the suburbs (or super suburbs, or super super suburbs out there in Death Valley or wherever the new developments are now) in towards the city centers in general with the least desirable housing (condos, townhomes, apt. conversions, cracker box houses in bad areas) falling the hardest. It’ll catch up to these areas at some point, but the gas prices can’t be helping much, so it’ll probably slow the decline in the prime central areas IMO.
It’s funny to see people talking about how the areas closer to the golden triangle and downtown haven’t declined as if they are immune somehow. If you read about downturns, it’s totally expected just like the bubble burst was.
Doofrat
ParticipantHousing slumps tend to travel from the suburbs (or super suburbs, or super super suburbs out there in Death Valley or wherever the new developments are now) in towards the city centers in general with the least desirable housing (condos, townhomes, apt. conversions, cracker box houses in bad areas) falling the hardest. It’ll catch up to these areas at some point, but the gas prices can’t be helping much, so it’ll probably slow the decline in the prime central areas IMO.
It’s funny to see people talking about how the areas closer to the golden triangle and downtown haven’t declined as if they are immune somehow. If you read about downturns, it’s totally expected just like the bubble burst was.
Doofrat
ParticipantHousing slumps tend to travel from the suburbs (or super suburbs, or super super suburbs out there in Death Valley or wherever the new developments are now) in towards the city centers in general with the least desirable housing (condos, townhomes, apt. conversions, cracker box houses in bad areas) falling the hardest. It’ll catch up to these areas at some point, but the gas prices can’t be helping much, so it’ll probably slow the decline in the prime central areas IMO.
It’s funny to see people talking about how the areas closer to the golden triangle and downtown haven’t declined as if they are immune somehow. If you read about downturns, it’s totally expected just like the bubble burst was.
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