Forum Replies Created
-
AuthorPosts
-
temeculaguy
ParticipantMore than likely they are just the prices sold back to the bank, redfin culls the data from the recorders office. When you see a map of redfin sold homes (or any other website that does the same thing) and the price is silly high or silly low, just check the sales history for clues. If there is a recorded sale in 2006 for 600k and a recent sale for 640k, while the comps are 300k, that’s the trustee sale back to the bank, it still records like any other sale. Sometimes it’s a silly low price because multiple lenders were involved but they don’t total them for the recording and it’s not always the highest that is picked up by the data sites. If you see a 2006 600k sale on the history and a 550k sale from early 2009 and then a 300k sale last month, that is not a bad flipper, that’s the bank taking it back for the amount owed in january and then the new buyer for a more more market based price of 300k.
Sold means the owner changed, it does not always mean that it was sold on the open market, but any good repo stalker knows, those are the ones in the “on deck” circle.
temeculaguy
ParticipantMore than likely they are just the prices sold back to the bank, redfin culls the data from the recorders office. When you see a map of redfin sold homes (or any other website that does the same thing) and the price is silly high or silly low, just check the sales history for clues. If there is a recorded sale in 2006 for 600k and a recent sale for 640k, while the comps are 300k, that’s the trustee sale back to the bank, it still records like any other sale. Sometimes it’s a silly low price because multiple lenders were involved but they don’t total them for the recording and it’s not always the highest that is picked up by the data sites. If you see a 2006 600k sale on the history and a 550k sale from early 2009 and then a 300k sale last month, that is not a bad flipper, that’s the bank taking it back for the amount owed in january and then the new buyer for a more more market based price of 300k.
Sold means the owner changed, it does not always mean that it was sold on the open market, but any good repo stalker knows, those are the ones in the “on deck” circle.
temeculaguy
ParticipantMore than likely they are just the prices sold back to the bank, redfin culls the data from the recorders office. When you see a map of redfin sold homes (or any other website that does the same thing) and the price is silly high or silly low, just check the sales history for clues. If there is a recorded sale in 2006 for 600k and a recent sale for 640k, while the comps are 300k, that’s the trustee sale back to the bank, it still records like any other sale. Sometimes it’s a silly low price because multiple lenders were involved but they don’t total them for the recording and it’s not always the highest that is picked up by the data sites. If you see a 2006 600k sale on the history and a 550k sale from early 2009 and then a 300k sale last month, that is not a bad flipper, that’s the bank taking it back for the amount owed in january and then the new buyer for a more more market based price of 300k.
Sold means the owner changed, it does not always mean that it was sold on the open market, but any good repo stalker knows, those are the ones in the “on deck” circle.
temeculaguy
Participantparamount, i don’t know if you still have it or if you bought it new but the used ones that were taxis or police cars had an issue that was caused by inordinate amount of time being in idle, it caused the idle air intake valve and other parts related to idling to fail, resulting in unintended acceleration. Not sure if you can blame the car since they are primarily used for cops and cabs, they idle well beyond what would be considered normal or tested for, probably more than 10x normal. If you think about it, both users pretty much live in the car, support aftermarket electronics and keep the ac going when not driving, so they idle more than they are driven, that cop or cab sitting there waiting for their next thing to do isn’t sitting in a car that has the engine off. The cop is wearing a vest and a few layers of clothes and the cabbie doesn’t want to roast his next fare. It’s a cheap fix and a friend of mine who encountered it said the dealer fixed it for free.
temeculaguy
Participantparamount, i don’t know if you still have it or if you bought it new but the used ones that were taxis or police cars had an issue that was caused by inordinate amount of time being in idle, it caused the idle air intake valve and other parts related to idling to fail, resulting in unintended acceleration. Not sure if you can blame the car since they are primarily used for cops and cabs, they idle well beyond what would be considered normal or tested for, probably more than 10x normal. If you think about it, both users pretty much live in the car, support aftermarket electronics and keep the ac going when not driving, so they idle more than they are driven, that cop or cab sitting there waiting for their next thing to do isn’t sitting in a car that has the engine off. The cop is wearing a vest and a few layers of clothes and the cabbie doesn’t want to roast his next fare. It’s a cheap fix and a friend of mine who encountered it said the dealer fixed it for free.
temeculaguy
Participantparamount, i don’t know if you still have it or if you bought it new but the used ones that were taxis or police cars had an issue that was caused by inordinate amount of time being in idle, it caused the idle air intake valve and other parts related to idling to fail, resulting in unintended acceleration. Not sure if you can blame the car since they are primarily used for cops and cabs, they idle well beyond what would be considered normal or tested for, probably more than 10x normal. If you think about it, both users pretty much live in the car, support aftermarket electronics and keep the ac going when not driving, so they idle more than they are driven, that cop or cab sitting there waiting for their next thing to do isn’t sitting in a car that has the engine off. The cop is wearing a vest and a few layers of clothes and the cabbie doesn’t want to roast his next fare. It’s a cheap fix and a friend of mine who encountered it said the dealer fixed it for free.
temeculaguy
Participantparamount, i don’t know if you still have it or if you bought it new but the used ones that were taxis or police cars had an issue that was caused by inordinate amount of time being in idle, it caused the idle air intake valve and other parts related to idling to fail, resulting in unintended acceleration. Not sure if you can blame the car since they are primarily used for cops and cabs, they idle well beyond what would be considered normal or tested for, probably more than 10x normal. If you think about it, both users pretty much live in the car, support aftermarket electronics and keep the ac going when not driving, so they idle more than they are driven, that cop or cab sitting there waiting for their next thing to do isn’t sitting in a car that has the engine off. The cop is wearing a vest and a few layers of clothes and the cabbie doesn’t want to roast his next fare. It’s a cheap fix and a friend of mine who encountered it said the dealer fixed it for free.
temeculaguy
Participantparamount, i don’t know if you still have it or if you bought it new but the used ones that were taxis or police cars had an issue that was caused by inordinate amount of time being in idle, it caused the idle air intake valve and other parts related to idling to fail, resulting in unintended acceleration. Not sure if you can blame the car since they are primarily used for cops and cabs, they idle well beyond what would be considered normal or tested for, probably more than 10x normal. If you think about it, both users pretty much live in the car, support aftermarket electronics and keep the ac going when not driving, so they idle more than they are driven, that cop or cab sitting there waiting for their next thing to do isn’t sitting in a car that has the engine off. The cop is wearing a vest and a few layers of clothes and the cabbie doesn’t want to roast his next fare. It’s a cheap fix and a friend of mine who encountered it said the dealer fixed it for free.
temeculaguy
ParticipantThanks ak, I knew there had to be a reason, as the night wears on and the wine bottle empties, my skills decline. It’s a whole different discussion, but how the hell does the government allow fha.com to be run by a non government entity, I’m losing faith in my government, in a perfect world, wouldn’t they just kill them, it’s taking the steam out of the conspiracy theories, how the hell can they manipulate an entire market if they can’t control a few domain names.
temeculaguy
ParticipantThanks ak, I knew there had to be a reason, as the night wears on and the wine bottle empties, my skills decline. It’s a whole different discussion, but how the hell does the government allow fha.com to be run by a non government entity, I’m losing faith in my government, in a perfect world, wouldn’t they just kill them, it’s taking the steam out of the conspiracy theories, how the hell can they manipulate an entire market if they can’t control a few domain names.
temeculaguy
ParticipantThanks ak, I knew there had to be a reason, as the night wears on and the wine bottle empties, my skills decline. It’s a whole different discussion, but how the hell does the government allow fha.com to be run by a non government entity, I’m losing faith in my government, in a perfect world, wouldn’t they just kill them, it’s taking the steam out of the conspiracy theories, how the hell can they manipulate an entire market if they can’t control a few domain names.
temeculaguy
ParticipantThanks ak, I knew there had to be a reason, as the night wears on and the wine bottle empties, my skills decline. It’s a whole different discussion, but how the hell does the government allow fha.com to be run by a non government entity, I’m losing faith in my government, in a perfect world, wouldn’t they just kill them, it’s taking the steam out of the conspiracy theories, how the hell can they manipulate an entire market if they can’t control a few domain names.
temeculaguy
ParticipantThanks ak, I knew there had to be a reason, as the night wears on and the wine bottle empties, my skills decline. It’s a whole different discussion, but how the hell does the government allow fha.com to be run by a non government entity, I’m losing faith in my government, in a perfect world, wouldn’t they just kill them, it’s taking the steam out of the conspiracy theories, how the hell can they manipulate an entire market if they can’t control a few domain names.
September 2, 2009 at 10:59 PM in reply to: Banks to Flood the Markets with Foreclosures – CNBC Reports #452260temeculaguy
ParticipantNothing personal, but the economy has become the “in” excuse. If I was talking to my aunt about my job and my title was “best boy” or “gaffer” and I was working in porn, I’d have to blame something but secretly I’d be estatic. As a consumer, the out of country porn isn’t as good, and i have a strict “buy american” policy.
btw, I’m just playing, I understand the industry and what those jobs really entail, the biggies are doing well but the industry as a whole is taking hits.
-
AuthorPosts
