
3 January 2014 | 4 replies
And sadly, the disappointing end-of-the-story is that raw emotions killed the deal - the disgruntled partner, not the villified banks.

6 January 2014 | 22 replies
On the other hand, some say that since the wife usually makes the final purchase decision, she is only going to be emotionally engaged if it is staged well, or at least, is COMPLETE.

6 January 2014 | 12 replies
Generally, as an agent we like to keep the principals apart, just due to emotional, personal issues, etc. getting in the way.

7 January 2014 | 7 replies
It is priced based upon emotions not actual business.

7 January 2014 | 3 replies
At the end of the day you can use emotional decisions or factual and logical/financing methods to determine if you should sell or not because it involves all of the above.

8 January 2014 | 3 replies
Ha, I almost bought my childhood home, then I realized I was being emotional more than I should be and passed on it.

21 January 2014 | 10 replies
As you read and learn al,l deals just come down to numbers don't add emotions if the numbers work and your honest with them then the deal should work.

26 November 2013 | 18 replies
The problem with almost all stock market investors is their emotional involvement with their money.

11 November 2013 | 41 replies
Are they ready, mentally, physically and emotionally?

7 June 2013 | 15 replies
Don't mix emotion and business decisions and try any harder to get that deal than you would have anyhow.