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lendingbubblecontinues
Participantesmith:
too many holes…too little time.
perhaps someone else has the patience and time to set this poster straight…I’ll start:
1) prices have been falling in spite of lower interest rates over the past year (you claim they may fall if interest go up)
2) $4000 a month (your figure, not mine, so accuracy not checked and presumably skewed to make a bullish point) will almost certainly buy a hell of a lot nicer home in two years than it does now.
op: keep your $134,000 down payment (20% of $670,000) for now…you’ll be happy you did
lendingbubblecontinues
Participantesmith:
too many holes…too little time.
perhaps someone else has the patience and time to set this poster straight…I’ll start:
1) prices have been falling in spite of lower interest rates over the past year (you claim they may fall if interest go up)
2) $4000 a month (your figure, not mine, so accuracy not checked and presumably skewed to make a bullish point) will almost certainly buy a hell of a lot nicer home in two years than it does now.
op: keep your $134,000 down payment (20% of $670,000) for now…you’ll be happy you did
lendingbubblecontinues
Participantesmith:
too many holes…too little time.
perhaps someone else has the patience and time to set this poster straight…I’ll start:
1) prices have been falling in spite of lower interest rates over the past year (you claim they may fall if interest go up)
2) $4000 a month (your figure, not mine, so accuracy not checked and presumably skewed to make a bullish point) will almost certainly buy a hell of a lot nicer home in two years than it does now.
op: keep your $134,000 down payment (20% of $670,000) for now…you’ll be happy you did
lendingbubblecontinues
Participantesmith:
too many holes…too little time.
perhaps someone else has the patience and time to set this poster straight…I’ll start:
1) prices have been falling in spite of lower interest rates over the past year (you claim they may fall if interest go up)
2) $4000 a month (your figure, not mine, so accuracy not checked and presumably skewed to make a bullish point) will almost certainly buy a hell of a lot nicer home in two years than it does now.
op: keep your $134,000 down payment (20% of $670,000) for now…you’ll be happy you did
lendingbubblecontinues
Participant@ esmith–
just wtf are you trying to say here? if you are throwing doubt on future enormous price drops, please state your situation, i.e. when you bought, where and what you bought (generally), and at what price, so that you may help us all begin to see it your way and/or see you as a bubble deny-er through and through.
Otherwise, I’ll just continue to think of you as another “born on third, thinks she hit a triple” type.
lendingbubblecontinues
Participant@ esmith–
just wtf are you trying to say here? if you are throwing doubt on future enormous price drops, please state your situation, i.e. when you bought, where and what you bought (generally), and at what price, so that you may help us all begin to see it your way and/or see you as a bubble deny-er through and through.
Otherwise, I’ll just continue to think of you as another “born on third, thinks she hit a triple” type.
lendingbubblecontinues
Participant@ esmith–
just wtf are you trying to say here? if you are throwing doubt on future enormous price drops, please state your situation, i.e. when you bought, where and what you bought (generally), and at what price, so that you may help us all begin to see it your way and/or see you as a bubble deny-er through and through.
Otherwise, I’ll just continue to think of you as another “born on third, thinks she hit a triple” type.
lendingbubblecontinues
Participant@ esmith–
just wtf are you trying to say here? if you are throwing doubt on future enormous price drops, please state your situation, i.e. when you bought, where and what you bought (generally), and at what price, so that you may help us all begin to see it your way and/or see you as a bubble deny-er through and through.
Otherwise, I’ll just continue to think of you as another “born on third, thinks she hit a triple” type.
lendingbubblecontinues
Participant@ esmith–
just wtf are you trying to say here? if you are throwing doubt on future enormous price drops, please state your situation, i.e. when you bought, where and what you bought (generally), and at what price, so that you may help us all begin to see it your way and/or see you as a bubble deny-er through and through.
Otherwise, I’ll just continue to think of you as another “born on third, thinks she hit a triple” type.
lendingbubblecontinues
ParticipantIf you’re not scared that it could be had for $470K in two years, by all means go ahead and buy it!
Mello-roos will only be with you for 30-40 years…no worries there, either.
One last thing…this bubble began long before 2003, my friend…it was on Wall Street’s drawing board in early 2000.
lendingbubblecontinues
ParticipantIf you’re not scared that it could be had for $470K in two years, by all means go ahead and buy it!
Mello-roos will only be with you for 30-40 years…no worries there, either.
One last thing…this bubble began long before 2003, my friend…it was on Wall Street’s drawing board in early 2000.
lendingbubblecontinues
ParticipantIf you’re not scared that it could be had for $470K in two years, by all means go ahead and buy it!
Mello-roos will only be with you for 30-40 years…no worries there, either.
One last thing…this bubble began long before 2003, my friend…it was on Wall Street’s drawing board in early 2000.
lendingbubblecontinues
ParticipantIf you’re not scared that it could be had for $470K in two years, by all means go ahead and buy it!
Mello-roos will only be with you for 30-40 years…no worries there, either.
One last thing…this bubble began long before 2003, my friend…it was on Wall Street’s drawing board in early 2000.
lendingbubblecontinues
ParticipantIf you’re not scared that it could be had for $470K in two years, by all means go ahead and buy it!
Mello-roos will only be with you for 30-40 years…no worries there, either.
One last thing…this bubble began long before 2003, my friend…it was on Wall Street’s drawing board in early 2000.
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