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patb
Participantlucky
why not a 10/20 ARM?
Then you are making amortizing payments and the payment transition
is far less shocking.patb
Participantlucky
why not a 10/20 ARM?
Then you are making amortizing payments and the payment transition
is far less shocking.patb
Participantlucky
why not a 10/20 ARM?
Then you are making amortizing payments and the payment transition
is far less shocking.patb
Participantlucky
why not a 10/20 ARM?
Then you are making amortizing payments and the payment transition
is far less shocking.patb
Participantlucky
why not a 10/20 ARM?
Then you are making amortizing payments and the payment transition
is far less shocking.patb
Participantinflation isn’t the concern, deflation is the concern.
Look first of all economics isn’t a machine science, it’s really the prediction of
human behaviour. It’s applied behavioural pschology. So what matters is
what people will do, not, just what you think.But say foreigners lose confidence in the dollar, they will demand higher
interest rates. higher interest rates will drive up mortgage rates.
Higher mortgage rates will crush house prices and sales.now say Obama and Bernanke start printing money like crazy, will
the banks be lending long? hell no. They’ll lend short, or demand
more rate.patb
Participantinflation isn’t the concern, deflation is the concern.
Look first of all economics isn’t a machine science, it’s really the prediction of
human behaviour. It’s applied behavioural pschology. So what matters is
what people will do, not, just what you think.But say foreigners lose confidence in the dollar, they will demand higher
interest rates. higher interest rates will drive up mortgage rates.
Higher mortgage rates will crush house prices and sales.now say Obama and Bernanke start printing money like crazy, will
the banks be lending long? hell no. They’ll lend short, or demand
more rate.patb
Participantinflation isn’t the concern, deflation is the concern.
Look first of all economics isn’t a machine science, it’s really the prediction of
human behaviour. It’s applied behavioural pschology. So what matters is
what people will do, not, just what you think.But say foreigners lose confidence in the dollar, they will demand higher
interest rates. higher interest rates will drive up mortgage rates.
Higher mortgage rates will crush house prices and sales.now say Obama and Bernanke start printing money like crazy, will
the banks be lending long? hell no. They’ll lend short, or demand
more rate.patb
Participantinflation isn’t the concern, deflation is the concern.
Look first of all economics isn’t a machine science, it’s really the prediction of
human behaviour. It’s applied behavioural pschology. So what matters is
what people will do, not, just what you think.But say foreigners lose confidence in the dollar, they will demand higher
interest rates. higher interest rates will drive up mortgage rates.
Higher mortgage rates will crush house prices and sales.now say Obama and Bernanke start printing money like crazy, will
the banks be lending long? hell no. They’ll lend short, or demand
more rate.patb
Participantinflation isn’t the concern, deflation is the concern.
Look first of all economics isn’t a machine science, it’s really the prediction of
human behaviour. It’s applied behavioural pschology. So what matters is
what people will do, not, just what you think.But say foreigners lose confidence in the dollar, they will demand higher
interest rates. higher interest rates will drive up mortgage rates.
Higher mortgage rates will crush house prices and sales.now say Obama and Bernanke start printing money like crazy, will
the banks be lending long? hell no. They’ll lend short, or demand
more rate.patb
Participant[quote=sdrealtor]My brother did an 80/20 with interest only on the 1st. Using the extra cash flow to help pay off the 2nd in 5 years. Then he’ll power down his 1st with huge principal payments. There another class of buyer. I’m sure there are others.[/quote]
how would that be different from a 97% with 30 year amortization?
patb
Participant[quote=sdrealtor]My brother did an 80/20 with interest only on the 1st. Using the extra cash flow to help pay off the 2nd in 5 years. Then he’ll power down his 1st with huge principal payments. There another class of buyer. I’m sure there are others.[/quote]
how would that be different from a 97% with 30 year amortization?
patb
Participant[quote=sdrealtor]My brother did an 80/20 with interest only on the 1st. Using the extra cash flow to help pay off the 2nd in 5 years. Then he’ll power down his 1st with huge principal payments. There another class of buyer. I’m sure there are others.[/quote]
how would that be different from a 97% with 30 year amortization?
patb
Participant[quote=sdrealtor]My brother did an 80/20 with interest only on the 1st. Using the extra cash flow to help pay off the 2nd in 5 years. Then he’ll power down his 1st with huge principal payments. There another class of buyer. I’m sure there are others.[/quote]
how would that be different from a 97% with 30 year amortization?
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