
28 December 2013 | 31 replies
Economists predict upwards of $700 billion added to the national economy, 4% or more in GDP growth and 1.7 million jobs, all by 2020.

9 October 2010 | 45 replies
We gave them several hundred billion dollars so you would think they can afford it.Call me old-fashioned, but why not just let the negligent banks get sued and go out of business?

1 March 2009 | 3 replies
We're going to fund our groups for a change.If they can give ACORN $4.1 billion then we can start paying our groups with federal money.

20 March 2009 | 8 replies
Because of the $410 billion spending bill loaded with pork?

19 September 2012 | 42 replies
Another 85 BILLION per month flooding the system for unknown period of time.

23 April 2016 | 13 replies
Here's your answer:Facebook had $1 billion in net income on $3.71 billion in 2011, according to its filing to raise $5 billion in an initial public offering.

19 November 2015 | 0 replies
Look at the success of so many other SaaS companies that are offering monthly or annual subscriptions for their services and have billion dollar valuations.
28 November 2015 | 11 replies
The pool had about 7,000 loans totaling $1.24 billion in aggregate UPB, divided amongst three pools: Pool #1: 1,963 loans with an aggregate UPB of $418,837,669; average loan size $213,366; weighted average note rate 5.21%; average delinquency 52 months; weighted average BPO LTV of 108%Pool #1 winning bid was 72.36% of UPB at 64.74% BPOPool #2: 3,823 loans with an aggregate UPB of $588,367,863; average loan size $153,902; weighted average note rate 5.32%; average delinquency 34 months; weighted average BPO LTV of 70%Pool #2 winning bid was 87.76% of UPB at 52.81% BPOPool #3: 1,224 loans with an aggregate UPB of $235,320,739; average loan size $192,256; weighted average note rate 4.90%; average delinquency 36 months; weighted average BPO LTV of 135%Pool # 3 winning bid was 54.75% UPB at 68.80% BPOThe weighted average of the whole offering was $177,251 in UPB and 5.20% interest.

16 April 2016 | 18 replies
The newbie is going to do something multi-billion dollar servicing firms, banks and investors can't.

3 May 2014 | 18 replies
I haven’t even mentioned many other start-up companies that are worth billions and tens of billions like Square, Pinterest, Twitter, Linked-In, Go-Pro, etc.