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WickedheartParticipant
Have you zillowed this property? I did.
Last sale and tax info
Sold 08/27/2007: $550,000
2007 Property Tax: $5,453The costs of ownership and the rent doesn’t pencil out. I wouldn’t touch it.
WickedheartParticipantHave you zillowed this property? I did.
Last sale and tax info
Sold 08/27/2007: $550,000
2007 Property Tax: $5,453The costs of ownership and the rent doesn’t pencil out. I wouldn’t touch it.
WickedheartParticipantHave you zillowed this property? I did.
Last sale and tax info
Sold 08/27/2007: $550,000
2007 Property Tax: $5,453The costs of ownership and the rent doesn’t pencil out. I wouldn’t touch it.
WickedheartParticipantHave you zillowed this property? I did.
Last sale and tax info
Sold 08/27/2007: $550,000
2007 Property Tax: $5,453The costs of ownership and the rent doesn’t pencil out. I wouldn’t touch it.
WickedheartParticipantHave you zillowed this property? I did.
Last sale and tax info
Sold 08/27/2007: $550,000
2007 Property Tax: $5,453The costs of ownership and the rent doesn’t pencil out. I wouldn’t touch it.
WickedheartParticipantHave you zillowed this property? I did.
Last sale and tax info
Sold 08/27/2007: $550,000
2007 Property Tax: $5,453The costs of ownership and the rent doesn’t pencil out. I wouldn’t touch it.
November 5, 2007 at 12:52 PM in reply to: Can splitting mortgage payment help you shave 10 years from 30 year loan? #95953WickedheartParticipant“I was offered a bi-weekly payment option when I bought my last house. As I recall it knocked off about 6 or 7 years of payments on a 30 year loan.”
“If the lender offers that option, then yes, it works. But you have to pay 24 times per year. You can’t arbitrarily select to do it or not on your own.”
There are 52 weeks in a year so it would work out to 26 bi-weekly payments in a year. That would pretty much be like making one extra monthly payment a year.
November 5, 2007 at 12:52 PM in reply to: Can splitting mortgage payment help you shave 10 years from 30 year loan? #96013WickedheartParticipant“I was offered a bi-weekly payment option when I bought my last house. As I recall it knocked off about 6 or 7 years of payments on a 30 year loan.”
“If the lender offers that option, then yes, it works. But you have to pay 24 times per year. You can’t arbitrarily select to do it or not on your own.”
There are 52 weeks in a year so it would work out to 26 bi-weekly payments in a year. That would pretty much be like making one extra monthly payment a year.
November 5, 2007 at 12:52 PM in reply to: Can splitting mortgage payment help you shave 10 years from 30 year loan? #96018WickedheartParticipant“I was offered a bi-weekly payment option when I bought my last house. As I recall it knocked off about 6 or 7 years of payments on a 30 year loan.”
“If the lender offers that option, then yes, it works. But you have to pay 24 times per year. You can’t arbitrarily select to do it or not on your own.”
There are 52 weeks in a year so it would work out to 26 bi-weekly payments in a year. That would pretty much be like making one extra monthly payment a year.
November 5, 2007 at 12:52 PM in reply to: Can splitting mortgage payment help you shave 10 years from 30 year loan? #96028WickedheartParticipant“I was offered a bi-weekly payment option when I bought my last house. As I recall it knocked off about 6 or 7 years of payments on a 30 year loan.”
“If the lender offers that option, then yes, it works. But you have to pay 24 times per year. You can’t arbitrarily select to do it or not on your own.”
There are 52 weeks in a year so it would work out to 26 bi-weekly payments in a year. That would pretty much be like making one extra monthly payment a year.
WickedheartParticipantFire isn’t just a danger in the outlying communties in San Diego. This could happen anywhere in SD, just look around you. San Diego is composed mostly of mesas and brush filled canyons and it’s all nice and dry, ready to burn. All it takes is the spark from a bulldozer or a carelessly tossed cigarette and you got a raging brush fire. The Normal Heights fire started in Mission Valley and raged up the brush filled hills and burned a 150 homes in the mid city.
In my former neighborhood ( in City Heights), Allstate refused to insure my neighbor’s home because of the brush and trees next to their property. CalTrans refused to clear the brush and the fire department said it was not a problem and not unsafe.
WickedheartParticipantFire isn’t just a danger in the outlying communties in San Diego. This could happen anywhere in SD, just look around you. San Diego is composed mostly of mesas and brush filled canyons and it’s all nice and dry, ready to burn. All it takes is the spark from a bulldozer or a carelessly tossed cigarette and you got a raging brush fire. The Normal Heights fire started in Mission Valley and raged up the brush filled hills and burned a 150 homes in the mid city.
In my former neighborhood ( in City Heights), Allstate refused to insure my neighbor’s home because of the brush and trees next to their property. CalTrans refused to clear the brush and the fire department said it was not a problem and not unsafe.
WickedheartParticipantFire isn’t just a danger in the outlying communties in San Diego. This could happen anywhere in SD, just look around you. San Diego is composed mostly of mesas and brush filled canyons and it’s all nice and dry, ready to burn. All it takes is the spark from a bulldozer or a carelessly tossed cigarette and you got a raging brush fire. The Normal Heights fire started in Mission Valley and raged up the brush filled hills and burned a 150 homes in the mid city.
In my former neighborhood ( in City Heights), Allstate refused to insure my neighbor’s home because of the brush and trees next to their property. CalTrans refused to clear the brush and the fire department said it was not a problem and not unsafe.
WickedheartParticipantI don’t understand it either. The article seems to be missing key information.
What caught my eye was this though;
“Sprecher’s order came in a lawsuit filed by O’Keefe & Sher seeking to invalidate mortgages taken out without the approval of customers, some of whom have received foreclosure notices.”
“As far as we’re concerned, those are illegal mortgages,” attorney Frank Farina said.”
What I want to know is, how can you take out a mortgage without the customers approval? I sure hope that would be illegal.
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