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XBoxBoy
ParticipantTo me this isn’t strange at all, but perfectly sensible. You’re assuming that stock price movements have something to do with the performance of the companies, but the evidence is that for the better part, stock price movements are totally unrelated to the companies. This might be hard to accept, since it is such an ingrained concept that the two are related.
From what I see, stock price movements are overwhelmingly about traders trying to figure out ways to take other trader’s money. I’m not sure what it means if the markets are all trading synchronously, but I assure you it has nothing to do with the companies that the markets represent.
XBoxBoy
ParticipantTo me this isn’t strange at all, but perfectly sensible. You’re assuming that stock price movements have something to do with the performance of the companies, but the evidence is that for the better part, stock price movements are totally unrelated to the companies. This might be hard to accept, since it is such an ingrained concept that the two are related.
From what I see, stock price movements are overwhelmingly about traders trying to figure out ways to take other trader’s money. I’m not sure what it means if the markets are all trading synchronously, but I assure you it has nothing to do with the companies that the markets represent.
XBoxBoy
ParticipantAre you crazy?
Okay, just kidding, but if I read that map correctly, your lot will not just back up to the affordable housing complex, but to it’s pool! Hmmmmm… affordable housing complex’s often have lots of college students, young people and others who like to have nice LOUD pool parties.
Seriously, I can’t tell you how much that will impact your resale value, but it definitely is gonna hurt. Enough so, that I would think virtually any other lot in the complex would be better.
Edit: Okay, maybe I misread the map. Looks like your lot is not directly overlooking the complex pool. But it does still overlook some lawn area at the affordable housing complex. Not as bad, but still not good.
Here’s a simple suggestion. Before you commit go down and visit your new lot at odd hours, like at 10pm on saturday or shortly after a chargers game ends, or friday early evening, etc. General rule though. Visit a prospective property multiple times at different times of day and different days of the week to find out what it might be like that you haven’t been told.
XBoxBoy
ParticipantAre you crazy?
Okay, just kidding, but if I read that map correctly, your lot will not just back up to the affordable housing complex, but to it’s pool! Hmmmmm… affordable housing complex’s often have lots of college students, young people and others who like to have nice LOUD pool parties.
Seriously, I can’t tell you how much that will impact your resale value, but it definitely is gonna hurt. Enough so, that I would think virtually any other lot in the complex would be better.
Edit: Okay, maybe I misread the map. Looks like your lot is not directly overlooking the complex pool. But it does still overlook some lawn area at the affordable housing complex. Not as bad, but still not good.
Here’s a simple suggestion. Before you commit go down and visit your new lot at odd hours, like at 10pm on saturday or shortly after a chargers game ends, or friday early evening, etc. General rule though. Visit a prospective property multiple times at different times of day and different days of the week to find out what it might be like that you haven’t been told.
XBoxBoy
ParticipantAre you crazy?
Okay, just kidding, but if I read that map correctly, your lot will not just back up to the affordable housing complex, but to it’s pool! Hmmmmm… affordable housing complex’s often have lots of college students, young people and others who like to have nice LOUD pool parties.
Seriously, I can’t tell you how much that will impact your resale value, but it definitely is gonna hurt. Enough so, that I would think virtually any other lot in the complex would be better.
Edit: Okay, maybe I misread the map. Looks like your lot is not directly overlooking the complex pool. But it does still overlook some lawn area at the affordable housing complex. Not as bad, but still not good.
Here’s a simple suggestion. Before you commit go down and visit your new lot at odd hours, like at 10pm on saturday or shortly after a chargers game ends, or friday early evening, etc. General rule though. Visit a prospective property multiple times at different times of day and different days of the week to find out what it might be like that you haven’t been told.
XBoxBoy
ParticipantAre you crazy?
Okay, just kidding, but if I read that map correctly, your lot will not just back up to the affordable housing complex, but to it’s pool! Hmmmmm… affordable housing complex’s often have lots of college students, young people and others who like to have nice LOUD pool parties.
Seriously, I can’t tell you how much that will impact your resale value, but it definitely is gonna hurt. Enough so, that I would think virtually any other lot in the complex would be better.
Edit: Okay, maybe I misread the map. Looks like your lot is not directly overlooking the complex pool. But it does still overlook some lawn area at the affordable housing complex. Not as bad, but still not good.
Here’s a simple suggestion. Before you commit go down and visit your new lot at odd hours, like at 10pm on saturday or shortly after a chargers game ends, or friday early evening, etc. General rule though. Visit a prospective property multiple times at different times of day and different days of the week to find out what it might be like that you haven’t been told.
XBoxBoy
ParticipantAre you crazy?
Okay, just kidding, but if I read that map correctly, your lot will not just back up to the affordable housing complex, but to it’s pool! Hmmmmm… affordable housing complex’s often have lots of college students, young people and others who like to have nice LOUD pool parties.
Seriously, I can’t tell you how much that will impact your resale value, but it definitely is gonna hurt. Enough so, that I would think virtually any other lot in the complex would be better.
Edit: Okay, maybe I misread the map. Looks like your lot is not directly overlooking the complex pool. But it does still overlook some lawn area at the affordable housing complex. Not as bad, but still not good.
Here’s a simple suggestion. Before you commit go down and visit your new lot at odd hours, like at 10pm on saturday or shortly after a chargers game ends, or friday early evening, etc. General rule though. Visit a prospective property multiple times at different times of day and different days of the week to find out what it might be like that you haven’t been told.
XBoxBoy
ParticipantThere are lots of factors that aren’t getting called out here. We recently reroofed an older house that originally had shake shingle installed on skip boards. To upgrade the roof, we had to have the singles taken off, and OSB board put down to cover the skip boards, then the shingles installed on top of that. The roof was also lots of small sections, not simple large areas. It was a 2000sqft house plus garage. We got a triple layer shingle. All in all, it cost just under $20k. We did a number of bids and that was not the absolute cheapest, but was one of the lower cost bids. We could have lowered the cost by going with a cheaper shingle so if you’re looking for a rock bottom price, don’t use our cost as an estimate.
The company was Premium Roofing, (619) 239-8880 and I highly recommend them.
XBoxBoy
XBoxBoy
ParticipantThere are lots of factors that aren’t getting called out here. We recently reroofed an older house that originally had shake shingle installed on skip boards. To upgrade the roof, we had to have the singles taken off, and OSB board put down to cover the skip boards, then the shingles installed on top of that. The roof was also lots of small sections, not simple large areas. It was a 2000sqft house plus garage. We got a triple layer shingle. All in all, it cost just under $20k. We did a number of bids and that was not the absolute cheapest, but was one of the lower cost bids. We could have lowered the cost by going with a cheaper shingle so if you’re looking for a rock bottom price, don’t use our cost as an estimate.
The company was Premium Roofing, (619) 239-8880 and I highly recommend them.
XBoxBoy
XBoxBoy
ParticipantThere are lots of factors that aren’t getting called out here. We recently reroofed an older house that originally had shake shingle installed on skip boards. To upgrade the roof, we had to have the singles taken off, and OSB board put down to cover the skip boards, then the shingles installed on top of that. The roof was also lots of small sections, not simple large areas. It was a 2000sqft house plus garage. We got a triple layer shingle. All in all, it cost just under $20k. We did a number of bids and that was not the absolute cheapest, but was one of the lower cost bids. We could have lowered the cost by going with a cheaper shingle so if you’re looking for a rock bottom price, don’t use our cost as an estimate.
The company was Premium Roofing, (619) 239-8880 and I highly recommend them.
XBoxBoy
XBoxBoy
ParticipantThere are lots of factors that aren’t getting called out here. We recently reroofed an older house that originally had shake shingle installed on skip boards. To upgrade the roof, we had to have the singles taken off, and OSB board put down to cover the skip boards, then the shingles installed on top of that. The roof was also lots of small sections, not simple large areas. It was a 2000sqft house plus garage. We got a triple layer shingle. All in all, it cost just under $20k. We did a number of bids and that was not the absolute cheapest, but was one of the lower cost bids. We could have lowered the cost by going with a cheaper shingle so if you’re looking for a rock bottom price, don’t use our cost as an estimate.
The company was Premium Roofing, (619) 239-8880 and I highly recommend them.
XBoxBoy
XBoxBoy
ParticipantThere are lots of factors that aren’t getting called out here. We recently reroofed an older house that originally had shake shingle installed on skip boards. To upgrade the roof, we had to have the singles taken off, and OSB board put down to cover the skip boards, then the shingles installed on top of that. The roof was also lots of small sections, not simple large areas. It was a 2000sqft house plus garage. We got a triple layer shingle. All in all, it cost just under $20k. We did a number of bids and that was not the absolute cheapest, but was one of the lower cost bids. We could have lowered the cost by going with a cheaper shingle so if you’re looking for a rock bottom price, don’t use our cost as an estimate.
The company was Premium Roofing, (619) 239-8880 and I highly recommend them.
XBoxBoy
XBoxBoy
Participant[quote=svelte]Maybe he got his Yahoo Chat and Pigg windows cross-threaded. :-)[/quote]
Or maybe he got his medical marijuana card this morning…. Nah, probably not….
XBoxBoy
Participant[quote=svelte]Maybe he got his Yahoo Chat and Pigg windows cross-threaded. :-)[/quote]
Or maybe he got his medical marijuana card this morning…. Nah, probably not….
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