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patientrenter
ParticipantI hate to disappoint you but, however just it might be, there will be no significant new taxes on RE. That would push prices down, and that is a political no-no. Why would the folks pouring trillions into trying to push RE prices up now turn around and push in the other direction?
patientrenter
ParticipantI hate to disappoint you but, however just it might be, there will be no significant new taxes on RE. That would push prices down, and that is a political no-no. Why would the folks pouring trillions into trying to push RE prices up now turn around and push in the other direction?
patientrenter
ParticipantI hate to disappoint you but, however just it might be, there will be no significant new taxes on RE. That would push prices down, and that is a political no-no. Why would the folks pouring trillions into trying to push RE prices up now turn around and push in the other direction?
August 31, 2009 at 4:54 PM in reply to: Banks to Flood the Markets with Foreclosures – CNBC Reports #451164patientrenter
Participant[quote=propertysearchaddiction]….Does anyone out there even still believe in the theory that they are going to open the flood gates and let all the foreclosures out at once?[/quote]
Of course not. socratt has it right.
August 31, 2009 at 4:54 PM in reply to: Banks to Flood the Markets with Foreclosures – CNBC Reports #451359patientrenter
Participant[quote=propertysearchaddiction]….Does anyone out there even still believe in the theory that they are going to open the flood gates and let all the foreclosures out at once?[/quote]
Of course not. socratt has it right.
August 31, 2009 at 4:54 PM in reply to: Banks to Flood the Markets with Foreclosures – CNBC Reports #451701patientrenter
Participant[quote=propertysearchaddiction]….Does anyone out there even still believe in the theory that they are going to open the flood gates and let all the foreclosures out at once?[/quote]
Of course not. socratt has it right.
August 31, 2009 at 4:54 PM in reply to: Banks to Flood the Markets with Foreclosures – CNBC Reports #451776patientrenter
Participant[quote=propertysearchaddiction]….Does anyone out there even still believe in the theory that they are going to open the flood gates and let all the foreclosures out at once?[/quote]
Of course not. socratt has it right.
August 31, 2009 at 4:54 PM in reply to: Banks to Flood the Markets with Foreclosures – CNBC Reports #451966patientrenter
Participant[quote=propertysearchaddiction]….Does anyone out there even still believe in the theory that they are going to open the flood gates and let all the foreclosures out at once?[/quote]
Of course not. socratt has it right.
patientrenter
ParticipantBut at some point, you just want to come back to a place you call home to recover, recharge, and re-plan. And when you’re away, you want to know you have such a place.
patientrenter
ParticipantBut at some point, you just want to come back to a place you call home to recover, recharge, and re-plan. And when you’re away, you want to know you have such a place.
patientrenter
ParticipantBut at some point, you just want to come back to a place you call home to recover, recharge, and re-plan. And when you’re away, you want to know you have such a place.
patientrenter
ParticipantBut at some point, you just want to come back to a place you call home to recover, recharge, and re-plan. And when you’re away, you want to know you have such a place.
patientrenter
ParticipantBut at some point, you just want to come back to a place you call home to recover, recharge, and re-plan. And when you’re away, you want to know you have such a place.
patientrenter
ParticipantI am not a homeowner, so I have no practical experience with the expenses. But in my own calcs, I tend to assume annual expenses of 2% of the building’s replacement cost for those once-every-few-years items, like kitchen and bathroom updates, and new roofs, wiring, plumbing etc. I figure that over 50 years, you’ll have to pretty much replace everything, unless you plan to become one of those people who live in a home that’s never updated. That excludes the annual or monthly maintenance expenses.
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