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kaycee
ParticipantThat would be awesome for me too. Never quite understood why I was a higher risk because I could afford more house. I would refi in a NY minute. (Another place where conforming loans are a joke)
kaycee
ParticipantThat would be awesome for me too. Never quite understood why I was a higher risk because I could afford more house. I would refi in a NY minute. (Another place where conforming loans are a joke)
kaycee
ParticipantThat would be awesome for me too. Never quite understood why I was a higher risk because I could afford more house. I would refi in a NY minute. (Another place where conforming loans are a joke)
kaycee
ParticipantThat would be awesome for me too. Never quite understood why I was a higher risk because I could afford more house. I would refi in a NY minute. (Another place where conforming loans are a joke)
kaycee
ParticipantOK, so it isn’t only me. I do agree that there are a ton of mark down sales out there. But there always is after the Holidays. For the last several years at least, I find that stores totally over order for the Holidays so as not to miss the “must have” merchandise. Then they dump whatever wasn’t “must have” in January. I assume that there is a proven profit motive in this.
But still, even if this is bottom feeding shopping, there seems to be an abnormally high number of bottom feeders out there. I’m not seeing any pocketbook pinching. There were 9 cars in line at the Starbucks drive through today at 3 o’clock.
kaycee
ParticipantOK, so it isn’t only me. I do agree that there are a ton of mark down sales out there. But there always is after the Holidays. For the last several years at least, I find that stores totally over order for the Holidays so as not to miss the “must have” merchandise. Then they dump whatever wasn’t “must have” in January. I assume that there is a proven profit motive in this.
But still, even if this is bottom feeding shopping, there seems to be an abnormally high number of bottom feeders out there. I’m not seeing any pocketbook pinching. There were 9 cars in line at the Starbucks drive through today at 3 o’clock.
kaycee
ParticipantOK, so it isn’t only me. I do agree that there are a ton of mark down sales out there. But there always is after the Holidays. For the last several years at least, I find that stores totally over order for the Holidays so as not to miss the “must have” merchandise. Then they dump whatever wasn’t “must have” in January. I assume that there is a proven profit motive in this.
But still, even if this is bottom feeding shopping, there seems to be an abnormally high number of bottom feeders out there. I’m not seeing any pocketbook pinching. There were 9 cars in line at the Starbucks drive through today at 3 o’clock.
kaycee
ParticipantOK, so it isn’t only me. I do agree that there are a ton of mark down sales out there. But there always is after the Holidays. For the last several years at least, I find that stores totally over order for the Holidays so as not to miss the “must have” merchandise. Then they dump whatever wasn’t “must have” in January. I assume that there is a proven profit motive in this.
But still, even if this is bottom feeding shopping, there seems to be an abnormally high number of bottom feeders out there. I’m not seeing any pocketbook pinching. There were 9 cars in line at the Starbucks drive through today at 3 o’clock.
kaycee
ParticipantOK, so it isn’t only me. I do agree that there are a ton of mark down sales out there. But there always is after the Holidays. For the last several years at least, I find that stores totally over order for the Holidays so as not to miss the “must have” merchandise. Then they dump whatever wasn’t “must have” in January. I assume that there is a proven profit motive in this.
But still, even if this is bottom feeding shopping, there seems to be an abnormally high number of bottom feeders out there. I’m not seeing any pocketbook pinching. There were 9 cars in line at the Starbucks drive through today at 3 o’clock.
kaycee
ParticipantSocratt, are you asking advice about buying land, buying this land in particular or buying Real Estate with the money from an IRA? My mother bought a Condo with her S/D IRA several years ago. She felt she knew more about RE (she’s a broker) than she did about the market, so that’s what she did with her money. She said it took some research but that it wasn’t hard to do. It’s in Park City and she rents it out as a vacation place. She makes pretty good money off of it. She’s been happy with the decision, but it does make an income. Land obviously wouldn’t. You’d only be betting on the appreciation.
kaycee
ParticipantSocratt, are you asking advice about buying land, buying this land in particular or buying Real Estate with the money from an IRA? My mother bought a Condo with her S/D IRA several years ago. She felt she knew more about RE (she’s a broker) than she did about the market, so that’s what she did with her money. She said it took some research but that it wasn’t hard to do. It’s in Park City and she rents it out as a vacation place. She makes pretty good money off of it. She’s been happy with the decision, but it does make an income. Land obviously wouldn’t. You’d only be betting on the appreciation.
kaycee
ParticipantSocratt, are you asking advice about buying land, buying this land in particular or buying Real Estate with the money from an IRA? My mother bought a Condo with her S/D IRA several years ago. She felt she knew more about RE (she’s a broker) than she did about the market, so that’s what she did with her money. She said it took some research but that it wasn’t hard to do. It’s in Park City and she rents it out as a vacation place. She makes pretty good money off of it. She’s been happy with the decision, but it does make an income. Land obviously wouldn’t. You’d only be betting on the appreciation.
kaycee
ParticipantSocratt, are you asking advice about buying land, buying this land in particular or buying Real Estate with the money from an IRA? My mother bought a Condo with her S/D IRA several years ago. She felt she knew more about RE (she’s a broker) than she did about the market, so that’s what she did with her money. She said it took some research but that it wasn’t hard to do. It’s in Park City and she rents it out as a vacation place. She makes pretty good money off of it. She’s been happy with the decision, but it does make an income. Land obviously wouldn’t. You’d only be betting on the appreciation.
kaycee
ParticipantSocratt, are you asking advice about buying land, buying this land in particular or buying Real Estate with the money from an IRA? My mother bought a Condo with her S/D IRA several years ago. She felt she knew more about RE (she’s a broker) than she did about the market, so that’s what she did with her money. She said it took some research but that it wasn’t hard to do. It’s in Park City and she rents it out as a vacation place. She makes pretty good money off of it. She’s been happy with the decision, but it does make an income. Land obviously wouldn’t. You’d only be betting on the appreciation.
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