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La Jolla Renter
Participant[quote]There is an upside to this, if cnbc goes under we might finally get to see maria, erin and the other financial babes of cnbc in playboy. Add in the “stimulate the economy” headline on the cover and that edition will be suitable for framing. I may go frame shopping this weekend to beat the rush.[/quote]
tg, nice one!
La Jolla Renter
ParticipantTo the CV experts:
What would this have gone for at the peak?
La Jolla Renter
ParticipantTo the CV experts:
What would this have gone for at the peak?
La Jolla Renter
ParticipantTo the CV experts:
What would this have gone for at the peak?
La Jolla Renter
ParticipantTo the CV experts:
What would this have gone for at the peak?
La Jolla Renter
ParticipantTo the CV experts:
What would this have gone for at the peak?
La Jolla Renter
ParticipantRaybynes, I like the way you think.
If my scores are 790 ish, and I pick up 4 new credit cards each year with 0% introductory rates at say 25k limits, then I put the funds in a cd at 4%, what would my credit score drop to?
I assume I would need to apply for several new 0% cards each year to trade the balances to, and then cancel the old cards when the intro rate disappears???
La Jolla Renter
ParticipantRaybynes, I like the way you think.
If my scores are 790 ish, and I pick up 4 new credit cards each year with 0% introductory rates at say 25k limits, then I put the funds in a cd at 4%, what would my credit score drop to?
I assume I would need to apply for several new 0% cards each year to trade the balances to, and then cancel the old cards when the intro rate disappears???
La Jolla Renter
ParticipantRaybynes, I like the way you think.
If my scores are 790 ish, and I pick up 4 new credit cards each year with 0% introductory rates at say 25k limits, then I put the funds in a cd at 4%, what would my credit score drop to?
I assume I would need to apply for several new 0% cards each year to trade the balances to, and then cancel the old cards when the intro rate disappears???
La Jolla Renter
ParticipantRaybynes, I like the way you think.
If my scores are 790 ish, and I pick up 4 new credit cards each year with 0% introductory rates at say 25k limits, then I put the funds in a cd at 4%, what would my credit score drop to?
I assume I would need to apply for several new 0% cards each year to trade the balances to, and then cancel the old cards when the intro rate disappears???
La Jolla Renter
ParticipantRaybynes, I like the way you think.
If my scores are 790 ish, and I pick up 4 new credit cards each year with 0% introductory rates at say 25k limits, then I put the funds in a cd at 4%, what would my credit score drop to?
I assume I would need to apply for several new 0% cards each year to trade the balances to, and then cancel the old cards when the intro rate disappears???
La Jolla Renter
ParticipantI don’t think we had recovered nicely in 94/95, maybe 96/97. Could it be that homeowners bought another home at the bottom and dumped the looser. Or homeowners held on as long as the could and then stopped paying and enjoyed free rent for a year.
I think there are a lot of investors and homeowners that have been hanging on for the last year or so, and are loosing the will to fight a loosing battle.
I have a few friends that can afford the negative cash flow on their investment properties but are strategically planning to bail.
The more that bail… the more that bail.
La Jolla Renter
ParticipantI don’t think we had recovered nicely in 94/95, maybe 96/97. Could it be that homeowners bought another home at the bottom and dumped the looser. Or homeowners held on as long as the could and then stopped paying and enjoyed free rent for a year.
I think there are a lot of investors and homeowners that have been hanging on for the last year or so, and are loosing the will to fight a loosing battle.
I have a few friends that can afford the negative cash flow on their investment properties but are strategically planning to bail.
The more that bail… the more that bail.
La Jolla Renter
ParticipantI don’t think we had recovered nicely in 94/95, maybe 96/97. Could it be that homeowners bought another home at the bottom and dumped the looser. Or homeowners held on as long as the could and then stopped paying and enjoyed free rent for a year.
I think there are a lot of investors and homeowners that have been hanging on for the last year or so, and are loosing the will to fight a loosing battle.
I have a few friends that can afford the negative cash flow on their investment properties but are strategically planning to bail.
The more that bail… the more that bail.
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