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RenParticipant
[quote=FormerSanDiegan]
Where is someone paying only $750 for a 3/2 ? Is this in El Centro ?[/quote]Yeah, I’d like to know myself. My first guess was Death Valley.
RenParticipant[quote=FormerSanDiegan]
Where is someone paying only $750 for a 3/2 ? Is this in El Centro ?[/quote]Yeah, I’d like to know myself. My first guess was Death Valley.
RenParticipant[quote=FormerSanDiegan]
Where is someone paying only $750 for a 3/2 ? Is this in El Centro ?[/quote]Yeah, I’d like to know myself. My first guess was Death Valley.
RenParticipant[quote=FormerSanDiegan]
Where is someone paying only $750 for a 3/2 ? Is this in El Centro ?[/quote]Yeah, I’d like to know myself. My first guess was Death Valley.
RenParticipant[quote=La Jolla Renter]And, not too long ago…
an investment property cash flowed with 20% down.
[/quote]They do today, in Murrieta and Temecula. However, I believe there may also be some significant rent drops, so I’m not comfortable buying them just yet.
Next we’ll see it in inland San Diego.I don’t think lending standards will tighten to the point they were in the past, but eliminating the liar loans is a great first step.
RenParticipant[quote=La Jolla Renter]And, not too long ago…
an investment property cash flowed with 20% down.
[/quote]They do today, in Murrieta and Temecula. However, I believe there may also be some significant rent drops, so I’m not comfortable buying them just yet.
Next we’ll see it in inland San Diego.I don’t think lending standards will tighten to the point they were in the past, but eliminating the liar loans is a great first step.
RenParticipant[quote=La Jolla Renter]And, not too long ago…
an investment property cash flowed with 20% down.
[/quote]They do today, in Murrieta and Temecula. However, I believe there may also be some significant rent drops, so I’m not comfortable buying them just yet.
Next we’ll see it in inland San Diego.I don’t think lending standards will tighten to the point they were in the past, but eliminating the liar loans is a great first step.
RenParticipant[quote=La Jolla Renter]And, not too long ago…
an investment property cash flowed with 20% down.
[/quote]They do today, in Murrieta and Temecula. However, I believe there may also be some significant rent drops, so I’m not comfortable buying them just yet.
Next we’ll see it in inland San Diego.I don’t think lending standards will tighten to the point they were in the past, but eliminating the liar loans is a great first step.
RenParticipant[quote=La Jolla Renter]And, not too long ago…
an investment property cash flowed with 20% down.
[/quote]They do today, in Murrieta and Temecula. However, I believe there may also be some significant rent drops, so I’m not comfortable buying them just yet.
Next we’ll see it in inland San Diego.I don’t think lending standards will tighten to the point they were in the past, but eliminating the liar loans is a great first step.
RenParticipant[quote=CONCHO]You can blame the stupid people for being stupid but that’s not going to stop this from happening again. Stupid people are always going to exist and they will always do stupid things. The real criminals are the ones that engineered the whole MBS scam and the ratings agencies that didn’t accurately rate those securities, thus inflating their value.[/quote]
No argument here. That’s all I’m doing – blaming the stupid people for their own predicament – not for the state of the market or the economy.
RenParticipant[quote=CONCHO]You can blame the stupid people for being stupid but that’s not going to stop this from happening again. Stupid people are always going to exist and they will always do stupid things. The real criminals are the ones that engineered the whole MBS scam and the ratings agencies that didn’t accurately rate those securities, thus inflating their value.[/quote]
No argument here. That’s all I’m doing – blaming the stupid people for their own predicament – not for the state of the market or the economy.
RenParticipant[quote=CONCHO]You can blame the stupid people for being stupid but that’s not going to stop this from happening again. Stupid people are always going to exist and they will always do stupid things. The real criminals are the ones that engineered the whole MBS scam and the ratings agencies that didn’t accurately rate those securities, thus inflating their value.[/quote]
No argument here. That’s all I’m doing – blaming the stupid people for their own predicament – not for the state of the market or the economy.
RenParticipant[quote=CONCHO]You can blame the stupid people for being stupid but that’s not going to stop this from happening again. Stupid people are always going to exist and they will always do stupid things. The real criminals are the ones that engineered the whole MBS scam and the ratings agencies that didn’t accurately rate those securities, thus inflating their value.[/quote]
No argument here. That’s all I’m doing – blaming the stupid people for their own predicament – not for the state of the market or the economy.
RenParticipant[quote=CONCHO]You can blame the stupid people for being stupid but that’s not going to stop this from happening again. Stupid people are always going to exist and they will always do stupid things. The real criminals are the ones that engineered the whole MBS scam and the ratings agencies that didn’t accurately rate those securities, thus inflating their value.[/quote]
No argument here. That’s all I’m doing – blaming the stupid people for their own predicament – not for the state of the market or the economy.
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