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SK in CV
Participant“They didn’t do the deep homework,” said an official involved in those discussions who spoke on condition of anonymity because he has clients involved with MERS. “So as far as anyone can tell their real theory was: ‘If we can get everyone on board, no judge will want to upend something that is reasonable and sensible and would screw up 70 percent of loans.’ ”
They obviously hadn’t had much experience with the bankruptcy court.
SK in CV
Participant“They didn’t do the deep homework,” said an official involved in those discussions who spoke on condition of anonymity because he has clients involved with MERS. “So as far as anyone can tell their real theory was: ‘If we can get everyone on board, no judge will want to upend something that is reasonable and sensible and would screw up 70 percent of loans.’ ”
They obviously hadn’t had much experience with the bankruptcy court.
SK in CV
Participant“They didn’t do the deep homework,” said an official involved in those discussions who spoke on condition of anonymity because he has clients involved with MERS. “So as far as anyone can tell their real theory was: ‘If we can get everyone on board, no judge will want to upend something that is reasonable and sensible and would screw up 70 percent of loans.’ ”
They obviously hadn’t had much experience with the bankruptcy court.
SK in CV
ParticipantMy observations have been that in the 2500 sf range, the $350/ft is pretty much the market. It seems the stuff that more routinely goes for down towards $300/ft are some the larger homes. (the larger homes in Ashley Falls area come to mind.) There are some exceptions for particular neighborhoods. Like the Lago Di Grata area. Those two dogs (I guess SDR flipped one of them) in there seemed to bring down the prices. I have a friend that will be listing his momentarily, and he’s hearing about $30 less per sq/ft than he was expecting. And the tiny little San Raphael development next door is lower.
But without weird little exceptions, most of CV in the 2200 to 2800 size range are most always +- $350/sq ft, and often higher unless there’s something wrong with the property, like noise due to proximity to the freeway.
Am I wrong here?
(And I have no idea about the Saratoga development. I don’t know any of the development names. I’ve lived here almost 10 years and I don’t even know what development I live in. Probably Carmel something-or-other :))
SK in CV
ParticipantMy observations have been that in the 2500 sf range, the $350/ft is pretty much the market. It seems the stuff that more routinely goes for down towards $300/ft are some the larger homes. (the larger homes in Ashley Falls area come to mind.) There are some exceptions for particular neighborhoods. Like the Lago Di Grata area. Those two dogs (I guess SDR flipped one of them) in there seemed to bring down the prices. I have a friend that will be listing his momentarily, and he’s hearing about $30 less per sq/ft than he was expecting. And the tiny little San Raphael development next door is lower.
But without weird little exceptions, most of CV in the 2200 to 2800 size range are most always +- $350/sq ft, and often higher unless there’s something wrong with the property, like noise due to proximity to the freeway.
Am I wrong here?
(And I have no idea about the Saratoga development. I don’t know any of the development names. I’ve lived here almost 10 years and I don’t even know what development I live in. Probably Carmel something-or-other :))
SK in CV
ParticipantMy observations have been that in the 2500 sf range, the $350/ft is pretty much the market. It seems the stuff that more routinely goes for down towards $300/ft are some the larger homes. (the larger homes in Ashley Falls area come to mind.) There are some exceptions for particular neighborhoods. Like the Lago Di Grata area. Those two dogs (I guess SDR flipped one of them) in there seemed to bring down the prices. I have a friend that will be listing his momentarily, and he’s hearing about $30 less per sq/ft than he was expecting. And the tiny little San Raphael development next door is lower.
But without weird little exceptions, most of CV in the 2200 to 2800 size range are most always +- $350/sq ft, and often higher unless there’s something wrong with the property, like noise due to proximity to the freeway.
Am I wrong here?
(And I have no idea about the Saratoga development. I don’t know any of the development names. I’ve lived here almost 10 years and I don’t even know what development I live in. Probably Carmel something-or-other :))
SK in CV
ParticipantMy observations have been that in the 2500 sf range, the $350/ft is pretty much the market. It seems the stuff that more routinely goes for down towards $300/ft are some the larger homes. (the larger homes in Ashley Falls area come to mind.) There are some exceptions for particular neighborhoods. Like the Lago Di Grata area. Those two dogs (I guess SDR flipped one of them) in there seemed to bring down the prices. I have a friend that will be listing his momentarily, and he’s hearing about $30 less per sq/ft than he was expecting. And the tiny little San Raphael development next door is lower.
But without weird little exceptions, most of CV in the 2200 to 2800 size range are most always +- $350/sq ft, and often higher unless there’s something wrong with the property, like noise due to proximity to the freeway.
Am I wrong here?
(And I have no idea about the Saratoga development. I don’t know any of the development names. I’ve lived here almost 10 years and I don’t even know what development I live in. Probably Carmel something-or-other :))
SK in CV
ParticipantMy observations have been that in the 2500 sf range, the $350/ft is pretty much the market. It seems the stuff that more routinely goes for down towards $300/ft are some the larger homes. (the larger homes in Ashley Falls area come to mind.) There are some exceptions for particular neighborhoods. Like the Lago Di Grata area. Those two dogs (I guess SDR flipped one of them) in there seemed to bring down the prices. I have a friend that will be listing his momentarily, and he’s hearing about $30 less per sq/ft than he was expecting. And the tiny little San Raphael development next door is lower.
But without weird little exceptions, most of CV in the 2200 to 2800 size range are most always +- $350/sq ft, and often higher unless there’s something wrong with the property, like noise due to proximity to the freeway.
Am I wrong here?
(And I have no idea about the Saratoga development. I don’t know any of the development names. I’ve lived here almost 10 years and I don’t even know what development I live in. Probably Carmel something-or-other :))
SK in CV
ParticipantI have no idea whether gambling losses would affect your ability to get good financing. I’m also not sure what “gambling …at the $40K level” means. If you’re saying you have $40K in reportable winnings and losses that exceeded those winnings by $7500, then it certainly should, depending on your other income, affect your ability to get good financing.
SK in CV
ParticipantI have no idea whether gambling losses would affect your ability to get good financing. I’m also not sure what “gambling …at the $40K level” means. If you’re saying you have $40K in reportable winnings and losses that exceeded those winnings by $7500, then it certainly should, depending on your other income, affect your ability to get good financing.
SK in CV
ParticipantI have no idea whether gambling losses would affect your ability to get good financing. I’m also not sure what “gambling …at the $40K level” means. If you’re saying you have $40K in reportable winnings and losses that exceeded those winnings by $7500, then it certainly should, depending on your other income, affect your ability to get good financing.
SK in CV
ParticipantI have no idea whether gambling losses would affect your ability to get good financing. I’m also not sure what “gambling …at the $40K level” means. If you’re saying you have $40K in reportable winnings and losses that exceeded those winnings by $7500, then it certainly should, depending on your other income, affect your ability to get good financing.
SK in CV
ParticipantI have no idea whether gambling losses would affect your ability to get good financing. I’m also not sure what “gambling …at the $40K level” means. If you’re saying you have $40K in reportable winnings and losses that exceeded those winnings by $7500, then it certainly should, depending on your other income, affect your ability to get good financing.
SK in CV
Participant[quote=UCGal]That graph is very distressing.
Health care costs in the US are out of control… and despite having what’s perceived as the best medical care in the world – the results aren’t showing that.[/quote]
Perceived as…..
According to the World Heath Organization, based on the most recent survey they’ve done, the US ranks 37th.
I’m not disputing your claim about the perception. I think you’re accurate. That perception, however, is clearly wrong. Our system is irreparably broken.
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