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April 11, 2008 at 9:31 AM in reply to: Anyone else see problems here? $30,000 income buys $316,000 house? #184958April 11, 2008 at 9:31 AM in reply to: Anyone else see problems here? $30,000 income buys $316,000 house? #184974
JWM in SD
ParticipantHey Kid, I hate to tell you this, but we didn’t steal your family’s money. I can tell you who did though. The realtor, builder, mortgage broker, and way down the line some WallStreet A-Hole running around NY in his $120K MB.
Why don’t you ask one of them to refund your money instead us because guess what, we’re taxpayers and fund the Govt.
April 11, 2008 at 9:31 AM in reply to: Anyone else see problems here? $30,000 income buys $316,000 house? #185004JWM in SD
ParticipantHey Kid, I hate to tell you this, but we didn’t steal your family’s money. I can tell you who did though. The realtor, builder, mortgage broker, and way down the line some WallStreet A-Hole running around NY in his $120K MB.
Why don’t you ask one of them to refund your money instead us because guess what, we’re taxpayers and fund the Govt.
April 11, 2008 at 9:31 AM in reply to: Anyone else see problems here? $30,000 income buys $316,000 house? #185010JWM in SD
ParticipantHey Kid, I hate to tell you this, but we didn’t steal your family’s money. I can tell you who did though. The realtor, builder, mortgage broker, and way down the line some WallStreet A-Hole running around NY in his $120K MB.
Why don’t you ask one of them to refund your money instead us because guess what, we’re taxpayers and fund the Govt.
April 11, 2008 at 9:31 AM in reply to: Anyone else see problems here? $30,000 income buys $316,000 house? #185014JWM in SD
ParticipantHey Kid, I hate to tell you this, but we didn’t steal your family’s money. I can tell you who did though. The realtor, builder, mortgage broker, and way down the line some WallStreet A-Hole running around NY in his $120K MB.
Why don’t you ask one of them to refund your money instead us because guess what, we’re taxpayers and fund the Govt.
JWM in SD
ParticipantI’ve said before and I will say it again. Until the credit crunch and monetary policy issues work themselves out in the long run, there is not going to be a real bottom to housing prices in SoCal.
In the next two years many banks are going to go out of business due to insolvency, more people are going to lose their jobs as the recession deepens, foreclosures will continue as second wave of resets hit, lending standards will get tighter and the deflationary cycle ramps up.
If you think that housing is at the bottom you are FOOLING YOURSELF!!!
JWM in SD
ParticipantI’ve said before and I will say it again. Until the credit crunch and monetary policy issues work themselves out in the long run, there is not going to be a real bottom to housing prices in SoCal.
In the next two years many banks are going to go out of business due to insolvency, more people are going to lose their jobs as the recession deepens, foreclosures will continue as second wave of resets hit, lending standards will get tighter and the deflationary cycle ramps up.
If you think that housing is at the bottom you are FOOLING YOURSELF!!!
JWM in SD
ParticipantI’ve said before and I will say it again. Until the credit crunch and monetary policy issues work themselves out in the long run, there is not going to be a real bottom to housing prices in SoCal.
In the next two years many banks are going to go out of business due to insolvency, more people are going to lose their jobs as the recession deepens, foreclosures will continue as second wave of resets hit, lending standards will get tighter and the deflationary cycle ramps up.
If you think that housing is at the bottom you are FOOLING YOURSELF!!!
JWM in SD
ParticipantI’ve said before and I will say it again. Until the credit crunch and monetary policy issues work themselves out in the long run, there is not going to be a real bottom to housing prices in SoCal.
In the next two years many banks are going to go out of business due to insolvency, more people are going to lose their jobs as the recession deepens, foreclosures will continue as second wave of resets hit, lending standards will get tighter and the deflationary cycle ramps up.
If you think that housing is at the bottom you are FOOLING YOURSELF!!!
JWM in SD
ParticipantI’ve said before and I will say it again. Until the credit crunch and monetary policy issues work themselves out in the long run, there is not going to be a real bottom to housing prices in SoCal.
In the next two years many banks are going to go out of business due to insolvency, more people are going to lose their jobs as the recession deepens, foreclosures will continue as second wave of resets hit, lending standards will get tighter and the deflationary cycle ramps up.
If you think that housing is at the bottom you are FOOLING YOURSELF!!!
JWM in SD
ParticipantAh, I love the smell of credit contraction in the morning….smells like….Deflation…
Look into EverBank.
JWM in SD
ParticipantAh, I love the smell of credit contraction in the morning….smells like….Deflation…
Look into EverBank.
JWM in SD
ParticipantAh, I love the smell of credit contraction in the morning….smells like….Deflation…
Look into EverBank.
JWM in SD
ParticipantAh, I love the smell of credit contraction in the morning….smells like….Deflation…
Look into EverBank.
JWM in SD
ParticipantAh, I love the smell of credit contraction in the morning….smells like….Deflation…
Look into EverBank.
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