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SD Realtor
ParticipantAs a tenant you have a bundle of rights but first and foremost the lease you signed (if it is still in effect) will still be supported under all specified obligations. Your new landlords will be in touch with you to give you new payment instructions. Once your lease is up then you will need to chat with them about resigning another lease or finding another place.
If they recorded the sale then it will be public record. If they did not record it then it will harder to find.
SD Realtor
ParticipantAs a tenant you have a bundle of rights but first and foremost the lease you signed (if it is still in effect) will still be supported under all specified obligations. Your new landlords will be in touch with you to give you new payment instructions. Once your lease is up then you will need to chat with them about resigning another lease or finding another place.
If they recorded the sale then it will be public record. If they did not record it then it will harder to find.
SD Realtor
ParticipantAs a tenant you have a bundle of rights but first and foremost the lease you signed (if it is still in effect) will still be supported under all specified obligations. Your new landlords will be in touch with you to give you new payment instructions. Once your lease is up then you will need to chat with them about resigning another lease or finding another place.
If they recorded the sale then it will be public record. If they did not record it then it will harder to find.
SD Realtor
ParticipantIt has been debated alot. It is a pretty easy calculation to see if it is worth your time but you need to get accurate estimates from other lenders not just on the loan but on closing costs and that is super hard to do.
The biggest problem is the closing date. If the home you want to buy is not going to close escrow for 5 months or so then nobody can quote you a rate right now because nobody will give you a 5 month lock. Sometimes the preferred lenders give a long lock and they may have a 1 time relock if the rates go down. It is a tough call to make. Overall the lenders that are preferred by the builder are fairly competitive but do your homework and check other outsiders.
SD Realtor
ParticipantIt has been debated alot. It is a pretty easy calculation to see if it is worth your time but you need to get accurate estimates from other lenders not just on the loan but on closing costs and that is super hard to do.
The biggest problem is the closing date. If the home you want to buy is not going to close escrow for 5 months or so then nobody can quote you a rate right now because nobody will give you a 5 month lock. Sometimes the preferred lenders give a long lock and they may have a 1 time relock if the rates go down. It is a tough call to make. Overall the lenders that are preferred by the builder are fairly competitive but do your homework and check other outsiders.
SD Realtor
ParticipantIt has been debated alot. It is a pretty easy calculation to see if it is worth your time but you need to get accurate estimates from other lenders not just on the loan but on closing costs and that is super hard to do.
The biggest problem is the closing date. If the home you want to buy is not going to close escrow for 5 months or so then nobody can quote you a rate right now because nobody will give you a 5 month lock. Sometimes the preferred lenders give a long lock and they may have a 1 time relock if the rates go down. It is a tough call to make. Overall the lenders that are preferred by the builder are fairly competitive but do your homework and check other outsiders.
SD Realtor
ParticipantIt has been debated alot. It is a pretty easy calculation to see if it is worth your time but you need to get accurate estimates from other lenders not just on the loan but on closing costs and that is super hard to do.
The biggest problem is the closing date. If the home you want to buy is not going to close escrow for 5 months or so then nobody can quote you a rate right now because nobody will give you a 5 month lock. Sometimes the preferred lenders give a long lock and they may have a 1 time relock if the rates go down. It is a tough call to make. Overall the lenders that are preferred by the builder are fairly competitive but do your homework and check other outsiders.
SD Realtor
ParticipantIt has been debated alot. It is a pretty easy calculation to see if it is worth your time but you need to get accurate estimates from other lenders not just on the loan but on closing costs and that is super hard to do.
The biggest problem is the closing date. If the home you want to buy is not going to close escrow for 5 months or so then nobody can quote you a rate right now because nobody will give you a 5 month lock. Sometimes the preferred lenders give a long lock and they may have a 1 time relock if the rates go down. It is a tough call to make. Overall the lenders that are preferred by the builder are fairly competitive but do your homework and check other outsiders.
October 20, 2009 at 9:12 AM in reply to: CNN forecasts 12% rise in 2010 in SD/Carlsbad/SM areas #471319SD Realtor
ParticipantI cannot understand substantial rising forecasts like that without hard economic improvement.
October 20, 2009 at 9:12 AM in reply to: CNN forecasts 12% rise in 2010 in SD/Carlsbad/SM areas #471501SD Realtor
ParticipantI cannot understand substantial rising forecasts like that without hard economic improvement.
October 20, 2009 at 9:12 AM in reply to: CNN forecasts 12% rise in 2010 in SD/Carlsbad/SM areas #471862SD Realtor
ParticipantI cannot understand substantial rising forecasts like that without hard economic improvement.
October 20, 2009 at 9:12 AM in reply to: CNN forecasts 12% rise in 2010 in SD/Carlsbad/SM areas #471939SD Realtor
ParticipantI cannot understand substantial rising forecasts like that without hard economic improvement.
October 20, 2009 at 9:12 AM in reply to: CNN forecasts 12% rise in 2010 in SD/Carlsbad/SM areas #472159SD Realtor
ParticipantI cannot understand substantial rising forecasts like that without hard economic improvement.
SD Realtor
ParticipantArraya we absolutely agree on that… yes I would agree that as of about 2003 Wall Street and even companies like AIG knew that for sure it was a no lose bet. Either you win and make money or you lose and get bailed out. I am sure it was known that a few lambs would be sacrificied but it was still a great bet.
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