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urbanrealtor
ParticipantGood Site:
http://www.priorityposting.comMarch 13, 2009 at 2:37 PM in reply to: Jim Cramer gets Pounded by John Stewart on the Daily Show #365385urbanrealtor
Participant[quote=peterb]MSM is one big shill for the Man![/quote]
But blogs are true revealed voice of reason.Long live the truth of the internet.
–Chief Minister, Bank of Nigeria
March 13, 2009 at 2:37 PM in reply to: Jim Cramer gets Pounded by John Stewart on the Daily Show #365674urbanrealtor
Participant[quote=peterb]MSM is one big shill for the Man![/quote]
But blogs are true revealed voice of reason.Long live the truth of the internet.
–Chief Minister, Bank of Nigeria
March 13, 2009 at 2:37 PM in reply to: Jim Cramer gets Pounded by John Stewart on the Daily Show #365836urbanrealtor
Participant[quote=peterb]MSM is one big shill for the Man![/quote]
But blogs are true revealed voice of reason.Long live the truth of the internet.
–Chief Minister, Bank of Nigeria
March 13, 2009 at 2:37 PM in reply to: Jim Cramer gets Pounded by John Stewart on the Daily Show #365872urbanrealtor
Participant[quote=peterb]MSM is one big shill for the Man![/quote]
But blogs are true revealed voice of reason.Long live the truth of the internet.
–Chief Minister, Bank of Nigeria
March 13, 2009 at 2:37 PM in reply to: Jim Cramer gets Pounded by John Stewart on the Daily Show #365983urbanrealtor
Participant[quote=peterb]MSM is one big shill for the Man![/quote]
But blogs are true revealed voice of reason.Long live the truth of the internet.
–Chief Minister, Bank of Nigeria
urbanrealtor
Participant[quote=massey]Is there any way to participate in the court house step sales if you intend to finance the property with a loan, or must you have the sale price in cash?[/quote]
No.
You need good funds (cash or equivalent) on site.If you bid 400 when you only have 350, you are committing a criminal act.
This is what i was told by my title officer and by auctioneers on site.
Do bear in mind that money from a loan on something else (eg: a cashiers check from your heloc) can be good funds.
There is no appraisal.
There is no inspection.
If a tax lien shows up down the road it can be re-attached to the property anytime in the next 4 months. That would become the buyer’s responsibility then.Conceivably, you could pull funds out of a heloc, buy a place with a cashier’s check (and yes they do give you change if you win for less than the check) and then take out a loan after purchase to pay back the heloc.
If you can do enough detective work prior to the auction, it can be worth it but assume others will do some of the same work.
Last time I was there, half the people had phones, multipage spreadsheets, and laptops with 3g antennas. This screams corporate sponsorship to me. Just sayin.
urbanrealtor
Participant[quote=massey]Is there any way to participate in the court house step sales if you intend to finance the property with a loan, or must you have the sale price in cash?[/quote]
No.
You need good funds (cash or equivalent) on site.If you bid 400 when you only have 350, you are committing a criminal act.
This is what i was told by my title officer and by auctioneers on site.
Do bear in mind that money from a loan on something else (eg: a cashiers check from your heloc) can be good funds.
There is no appraisal.
There is no inspection.
If a tax lien shows up down the road it can be re-attached to the property anytime in the next 4 months. That would become the buyer’s responsibility then.Conceivably, you could pull funds out of a heloc, buy a place with a cashier’s check (and yes they do give you change if you win for less than the check) and then take out a loan after purchase to pay back the heloc.
If you can do enough detective work prior to the auction, it can be worth it but assume others will do some of the same work.
Last time I was there, half the people had phones, multipage spreadsheets, and laptops with 3g antennas. This screams corporate sponsorship to me. Just sayin.
urbanrealtor
Participant[quote=massey]Is there any way to participate in the court house step sales if you intend to finance the property with a loan, or must you have the sale price in cash?[/quote]
No.
You need good funds (cash or equivalent) on site.If you bid 400 when you only have 350, you are committing a criminal act.
This is what i was told by my title officer and by auctioneers on site.
Do bear in mind that money from a loan on something else (eg: a cashiers check from your heloc) can be good funds.
There is no appraisal.
There is no inspection.
If a tax lien shows up down the road it can be re-attached to the property anytime in the next 4 months. That would become the buyer’s responsibility then.Conceivably, you could pull funds out of a heloc, buy a place with a cashier’s check (and yes they do give you change if you win for less than the check) and then take out a loan after purchase to pay back the heloc.
If you can do enough detective work prior to the auction, it can be worth it but assume others will do some of the same work.
Last time I was there, half the people had phones, multipage spreadsheets, and laptops with 3g antennas. This screams corporate sponsorship to me. Just sayin.
urbanrealtor
Participant[quote=massey]Is there any way to participate in the court house step sales if you intend to finance the property with a loan, or must you have the sale price in cash?[/quote]
No.
You need good funds (cash or equivalent) on site.If you bid 400 when you only have 350, you are committing a criminal act.
This is what i was told by my title officer and by auctioneers on site.
Do bear in mind that money from a loan on something else (eg: a cashiers check from your heloc) can be good funds.
There is no appraisal.
There is no inspection.
If a tax lien shows up down the road it can be re-attached to the property anytime in the next 4 months. That would become the buyer’s responsibility then.Conceivably, you could pull funds out of a heloc, buy a place with a cashier’s check (and yes they do give you change if you win for less than the check) and then take out a loan after purchase to pay back the heloc.
If you can do enough detective work prior to the auction, it can be worth it but assume others will do some of the same work.
Last time I was there, half the people had phones, multipage spreadsheets, and laptops with 3g antennas. This screams corporate sponsorship to me. Just sayin.
urbanrealtor
Participant[quote=massey]Is there any way to participate in the court house step sales if you intend to finance the property with a loan, or must you have the sale price in cash?[/quote]
No.
You need good funds (cash or equivalent) on site.If you bid 400 when you only have 350, you are committing a criminal act.
This is what i was told by my title officer and by auctioneers on site.
Do bear in mind that money from a loan on something else (eg: a cashiers check from your heloc) can be good funds.
There is no appraisal.
There is no inspection.
If a tax lien shows up down the road it can be re-attached to the property anytime in the next 4 months. That would become the buyer’s responsibility then.Conceivably, you could pull funds out of a heloc, buy a place with a cashier’s check (and yes they do give you change if you win for less than the check) and then take out a loan after purchase to pay back the heloc.
If you can do enough detective work prior to the auction, it can be worth it but assume others will do some of the same work.
Last time I was there, half the people had phones, multipage spreadsheets, and laptops with 3g antennas. This screams corporate sponsorship to me. Just sayin.
urbanrealtor
Participant[quote=barnaby33]Take 2000 prices, add in zero for inflation and you have reasonable prices in todays dollars. Salaries not going up? Prices must come down. I earn LESS now than I did then in real terms and so is most everyone else.
Josh
[/quote]
Mr. G,
Thats because you live in my neighborhood and don’t shave.urbanrealtor
Participant[quote=barnaby33]Take 2000 prices, add in zero for inflation and you have reasonable prices in todays dollars. Salaries not going up? Prices must come down. I earn LESS now than I did then in real terms and so is most everyone else.
Josh
[/quote]
Mr. G,
Thats because you live in my neighborhood and don’t shave.urbanrealtor
Participant[quote=barnaby33]Take 2000 prices, add in zero for inflation and you have reasonable prices in todays dollars. Salaries not going up? Prices must come down. I earn LESS now than I did then in real terms and so is most everyone else.
Josh
[/quote]
Mr. G,
Thats because you live in my neighborhood and don’t shave. -
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