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December 11, 2007 at 9:07 AM in reply to: Top 10 Ways to Market Your Listing and Find a Buyer in 30 Days #113967December 11, 2007 at 9:07 AM in reply to: Top 10 Ways to Market Your Listing and Find a Buyer in 30 Days #114087
(former)FormerSanDiegan
ParticipantGreat stuff no_such_reality!
Note that these suggestions are essentially agent-independent.
December 11, 2007 at 9:07 AM in reply to: Top 10 Ways to Market Your Listing and Find a Buyer in 30 Days #114130(former)FormerSanDiegan
ParticipantGreat stuff no_such_reality!
Note that these suggestions are essentially agent-independent.
December 11, 2007 at 9:07 AM in reply to: Top 10 Ways to Market Your Listing and Find a Buyer in 30 Days #114134(former)FormerSanDiegan
ParticipantGreat stuff no_such_reality!
Note that these suggestions are essentially agent-independent.
December 11, 2007 at 9:07 AM in reply to: Top 10 Ways to Market Your Listing and Find a Buyer in 30 Days #114169(former)FormerSanDiegan
ParticipantGreat stuff no_such_reality!
Note that these suggestions are essentially agent-independent.
(former)FormerSanDiegan
ParticipantWhat are the usual “Average cars” driven by J6P? 32K seems a bit steep. Camry is 17-25K Invoice and 18-28K MSRP. F-150 starts 17K MSRP. And they can only pony up $1500 to buy these toys?
It didn’t say the loan on an average car, like a Camry. It said the average car loan. A few expensive samples can really skew the numbers.
Consider a sample that has 5 average sedans (e.g.Camry’s at 25K each) and one Range Rover for 75K, with 10% down.
The average loan would be 30K.(former)FormerSanDiegan
ParticipantWhat are the usual “Average cars” driven by J6P? 32K seems a bit steep. Camry is 17-25K Invoice and 18-28K MSRP. F-150 starts 17K MSRP. And they can only pony up $1500 to buy these toys?
It didn’t say the loan on an average car, like a Camry. It said the average car loan. A few expensive samples can really skew the numbers.
Consider a sample that has 5 average sedans (e.g.Camry’s at 25K each) and one Range Rover for 75K, with 10% down.
The average loan would be 30K.(former)FormerSanDiegan
ParticipantWhat are the usual “Average cars” driven by J6P? 32K seems a bit steep. Camry is 17-25K Invoice and 18-28K MSRP. F-150 starts 17K MSRP. And they can only pony up $1500 to buy these toys?
It didn’t say the loan on an average car, like a Camry. It said the average car loan. A few expensive samples can really skew the numbers.
Consider a sample that has 5 average sedans (e.g.Camry’s at 25K each) and one Range Rover for 75K, with 10% down.
The average loan would be 30K.(former)FormerSanDiegan
ParticipantWhat are the usual “Average cars” driven by J6P? 32K seems a bit steep. Camry is 17-25K Invoice and 18-28K MSRP. F-150 starts 17K MSRP. And they can only pony up $1500 to buy these toys?
It didn’t say the loan on an average car, like a Camry. It said the average car loan. A few expensive samples can really skew the numbers.
Consider a sample that has 5 average sedans (e.g.Camry’s at 25K each) and one Range Rover for 75K, with 10% down.
The average loan would be 30K.(former)FormerSanDiegan
ParticipantWhat are the usual “Average cars” driven by J6P? 32K seems a bit steep. Camry is 17-25K Invoice and 18-28K MSRP. F-150 starts 17K MSRP. And they can only pony up $1500 to buy these toys?
It didn’t say the loan on an average car, like a Camry. It said the average car loan. A few expensive samples can really skew the numbers.
Consider a sample that has 5 average sedans (e.g.Camry’s at 25K each) and one Range Rover for 75K, with 10% down.
The average loan would be 30K.(former)FormerSanDiegan
ParticipantThe NOD/NOT is always noisy. However, in the recent past it was spiking up so quickly that the overwhelmingly increasing trend masked the noise. This could be a first sign that we are seeing a flattening of foreclosures … but we won’t know for a couple months.
(former)FormerSanDiegan
ParticipantThe NOD/NOT is always noisy. However, in the recent past it was spiking up so quickly that the overwhelmingly increasing trend masked the noise. This could be a first sign that we are seeing a flattening of foreclosures … but we won’t know for a couple months.
(former)FormerSanDiegan
ParticipantThe NOD/NOT is always noisy. However, in the recent past it was spiking up so quickly that the overwhelmingly increasing trend masked the noise. This could be a first sign that we are seeing a flattening of foreclosures … but we won’t know for a couple months.
(former)FormerSanDiegan
ParticipantThe NOD/NOT is always noisy. However, in the recent past it was spiking up so quickly that the overwhelmingly increasing trend masked the noise. This could be a first sign that we are seeing a flattening of foreclosures … but we won’t know for a couple months.
(former)FormerSanDiegan
ParticipantThe NOD/NOT is always noisy. However, in the recent past it was spiking up so quickly that the overwhelmingly increasing trend masked the noise. This could be a first sign that we are seeing a flattening of foreclosures … but we won’t know for a couple months.
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