
17 September 2019 | 7 replies
Also, your parents may be able to put one of the household utility bills in your name, which has the same effect of showing a history of on time payments.

2 September 2019 | 13 replies
Plus I believe people are buying 40 cases of water per person in the household.

3 May 2011 | 1 reply
Plus, with coverage of 94% of the U.S. population (and growing), our customers have access to information on over 134 million households.

9 June 2011 | 8 replies
Median household income for the area is $35,000.

18 June 2011 | 2 replies
If the purpose of the loan is for personal, family or household use then NMLS is required.

18 March 2021 | 45 replies
Add in corporate, household and municipal debt and you get a chart that looks like this:http://prudentinvestor.blogspot.com/2010/02/chart-of-day-us-debt-vs-gdp-in-2009.htmlHow would you not worry about our situation?

22 July 2011 | 4 replies
Okay so in my apartments I tell the previous owner (I recently just bought them) that I plan on going in once a month and changing the air filter.This way the units can be inspected some and also I know the power bill won't be as high for the tenant and the low air flow won't burn out the fan motors faster.The seller mentioned to me that I should also check the toilets as well.The seller stated that tenants like to put those chlorox bleach tablets in the toilets and it eats up the flapper valves.This causes a water leak and runs up the water bill for the landlord.Here the water is included in the total rent payment each month.So should I ban the chlorine tablets from the toilets or should I just replace the flappers all at once??

17 October 2011 | 6 replies
We've had at least two households that I know of stop paying their monthly fees after they defaulted on their mortgages (one of the houses just went back to a bank).

17 February 2009 | 0 replies
(I do believe he's one of those psychic fellers): Bernanke remarks EXCELLENT paragraph within: "Although deflation and the zero bound on nominal interest rates create a significant problem for those seeking to borrow, they impose an even greater burden on households and firms that had accumulated substantial debt before the onset of the deflation.
20 December 2009 | 16 replies
More extreme: Wash the walls with household cleaner.