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January 5, 2009 at 6:59 PM in reply to: Chances of buying an REO or short-sale without 20% down? #324413January 5, 2009 at 6:59 PM in reply to: Chances of buying an REO or short-sale without 20% down? #324748KCTxrParticipant
We are maybe in a similar situation and looking in PQ. Lease here now and owner has stopped paying the bank. Add one more to that list.
January 5, 2009 at 6:59 PM in reply to: Chances of buying an REO or short-sale without 20% down? #324817KCTxrParticipantWe are maybe in a similar situation and looking in PQ. Lease here now and owner has stopped paying the bank. Add one more to that list.
January 5, 2009 at 6:59 PM in reply to: Chances of buying an REO or short-sale without 20% down? #324834KCTxrParticipantWe are maybe in a similar situation and looking in PQ. Lease here now and owner has stopped paying the bank. Add one more to that list.
January 5, 2009 at 6:59 PM in reply to: Chances of buying an REO or short-sale without 20% down? #324915KCTxrParticipantWe are maybe in a similar situation and looking in PQ. Lease here now and owner has stopped paying the bank. Add one more to that list.
KCTxrParticipantHousing: Overall, prices to stagnate due to increased sales on the low end and “sticky on the way down” for higher.
Jobs: Biotech to fluctuate with layoffs, but hiring by others. Technology the same as biotech. Bricks & mortar engineering to pick back up in the end of the year driving large project construction in 2010. Services to get hit driving unemployment % up a couple for everything. Healthcare to stay strong (my back hurts). Local and State Govt will hurt. Defense spending gets pulled back impacting 2010. If you have a job, keep it and don’t look. If you are graduating, stay in school another year.
Oil: Float around $40 +/- 10 till the end of the year (about that long for biogasification and other creative renewables initiatives to get put on the back burner). Then magically up to 80-100 and here we go again.
Gold: I thinkg my mining company certificates from the ’20s are useless, but they look cool.
$ vs Euro: Euro drift down, USD drift up. They are struggling too.
Final thoughts: Daughter getting married to a fine young man, son graduating HS and going to college, my job is fun and secure, youngest daughter does not plan to get hurt in gymnastics, only get kicked out of one house because the owner we are leasing from is in foreclosure and wife continues to pressure to buy but understands. Things are looking up!
KCTxrParticipantHousing: Overall, prices to stagnate due to increased sales on the low end and “sticky on the way down” for higher.
Jobs: Biotech to fluctuate with layoffs, but hiring by others. Technology the same as biotech. Bricks & mortar engineering to pick back up in the end of the year driving large project construction in 2010. Services to get hit driving unemployment % up a couple for everything. Healthcare to stay strong (my back hurts). Local and State Govt will hurt. Defense spending gets pulled back impacting 2010. If you have a job, keep it and don’t look. If you are graduating, stay in school another year.
Oil: Float around $40 +/- 10 till the end of the year (about that long for biogasification and other creative renewables initiatives to get put on the back burner). Then magically up to 80-100 and here we go again.
Gold: I thinkg my mining company certificates from the ’20s are useless, but they look cool.
$ vs Euro: Euro drift down, USD drift up. They are struggling too.
Final thoughts: Daughter getting married to a fine young man, son graduating HS and going to college, my job is fun and secure, youngest daughter does not plan to get hurt in gymnastics, only get kicked out of one house because the owner we are leasing from is in foreclosure and wife continues to pressure to buy but understands. Things are looking up!
KCTxrParticipantHousing: Overall, prices to stagnate due to increased sales on the low end and “sticky on the way down” for higher.
Jobs: Biotech to fluctuate with layoffs, but hiring by others. Technology the same as biotech. Bricks & mortar engineering to pick back up in the end of the year driving large project construction in 2010. Services to get hit driving unemployment % up a couple for everything. Healthcare to stay strong (my back hurts). Local and State Govt will hurt. Defense spending gets pulled back impacting 2010. If you have a job, keep it and don’t look. If you are graduating, stay in school another year.
Oil: Float around $40 +/- 10 till the end of the year (about that long for biogasification and other creative renewables initiatives to get put on the back burner). Then magically up to 80-100 and here we go again.
Gold: I thinkg my mining company certificates from the ’20s are useless, but they look cool.
$ vs Euro: Euro drift down, USD drift up. They are struggling too.
Final thoughts: Daughter getting married to a fine young man, son graduating HS and going to college, my job is fun and secure, youngest daughter does not plan to get hurt in gymnastics, only get kicked out of one house because the owner we are leasing from is in foreclosure and wife continues to pressure to buy but understands. Things are looking up!
KCTxrParticipantHousing: Overall, prices to stagnate due to increased sales on the low end and “sticky on the way down” for higher.
Jobs: Biotech to fluctuate with layoffs, but hiring by others. Technology the same as biotech. Bricks & mortar engineering to pick back up in the end of the year driving large project construction in 2010. Services to get hit driving unemployment % up a couple for everything. Healthcare to stay strong (my back hurts). Local and State Govt will hurt. Defense spending gets pulled back impacting 2010. If you have a job, keep it and don’t look. If you are graduating, stay in school another year.
Oil: Float around $40 +/- 10 till the end of the year (about that long for biogasification and other creative renewables initiatives to get put on the back burner). Then magically up to 80-100 and here we go again.
Gold: I thinkg my mining company certificates from the ’20s are useless, but they look cool.
$ vs Euro: Euro drift down, USD drift up. They are struggling too.
Final thoughts: Daughter getting married to a fine young man, son graduating HS and going to college, my job is fun and secure, youngest daughter does not plan to get hurt in gymnastics, only get kicked out of one house because the owner we are leasing from is in foreclosure and wife continues to pressure to buy but understands. Things are looking up!
KCTxrParticipantHousing: Overall, prices to stagnate due to increased sales on the low end and “sticky on the way down” for higher.
Jobs: Biotech to fluctuate with layoffs, but hiring by others. Technology the same as biotech. Bricks & mortar engineering to pick back up in the end of the year driving large project construction in 2010. Services to get hit driving unemployment % up a couple for everything. Healthcare to stay strong (my back hurts). Local and State Govt will hurt. Defense spending gets pulled back impacting 2010. If you have a job, keep it and don’t look. If you are graduating, stay in school another year.
Oil: Float around $40 +/- 10 till the end of the year (about that long for biogasification and other creative renewables initiatives to get put on the back burner). Then magically up to 80-100 and here we go again.
Gold: I thinkg my mining company certificates from the ’20s are useless, but they look cool.
$ vs Euro: Euro drift down, USD drift up. They are struggling too.
Final thoughts: Daughter getting married to a fine young man, son graduating HS and going to college, my job is fun and secure, youngest daughter does not plan to get hurt in gymnastics, only get kicked out of one house because the owner we are leasing from is in foreclosure and wife continues to pressure to buy but understands. Things are looking up!
December 9, 2008 at 5:56 AM in reply to: Can you sell your house as a short sale if you can still make the mortgage payment? #313234KCTxrParticipantRus,
Yes to your last question, but I am not a true pigg. I mostly read alot over the last 3 years and not post much. Ya’ll are quick, thorough, gramatically correct and sometimes lengthy. I am not there.
See Ya.
December 9, 2008 at 5:56 AM in reply to: Can you sell your house as a short sale if you can still make the mortgage payment? #313590KCTxrParticipantRus,
Yes to your last question, but I am not a true pigg. I mostly read alot over the last 3 years and not post much. Ya’ll are quick, thorough, gramatically correct and sometimes lengthy. I am not there.
See Ya.
December 9, 2008 at 5:56 AM in reply to: Can you sell your house as a short sale if you can still make the mortgage payment? #313621KCTxrParticipantRus,
Yes to your last question, but I am not a true pigg. I mostly read alot over the last 3 years and not post much. Ya’ll are quick, thorough, gramatically correct and sometimes lengthy. I am not there.
See Ya.
December 9, 2008 at 5:56 AM in reply to: Can you sell your house as a short sale if you can still make the mortgage payment? #313644KCTxrParticipantRus,
Yes to your last question, but I am not a true pigg. I mostly read alot over the last 3 years and not post much. Ya’ll are quick, thorough, gramatically correct and sometimes lengthy. I am not there.
See Ya.
December 9, 2008 at 5:56 AM in reply to: Can you sell your house as a short sale if you can still make the mortgage payment? #313713KCTxrParticipantRus,
Yes to your last question, but I am not a true pigg. I mostly read alot over the last 3 years and not post much. Ya’ll are quick, thorough, gramatically correct and sometimes lengthy. I am not there.
See Ya.
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