
28 May 2018 | 25 replies
Let's see what her next exacerbation is going to be, after she put out dangerous chemicals that can hurt the tenant's child and dog.

14 November 2017 | 13 replies
The original job loss exacerbated the problem.

11 December 2015 | 9 replies
The issue is exacerbated with the leased panels over the purchased ones as well.

8 September 2016 | 51 replies
It's also had more get rich quick charlatans than any other form of making money in real estate, further exacerbating things.

6 September 2010 | 67 replies
I would argue that the mess we're in arose primarily from the housing bubble and was exacerbated by fund managers' over-leverged speculative plays on the housing market and derivatives thereof.

28 September 2012 | 51 replies
Neither of these tactics is capitalistic, and both will only serve to weaken our economic infrastructure.In my opinion, it doesn't matter who the next President is...the problems won't be solved in the next 4 years, they will only be exacerbated.

8 February 2018 | 3 replies
It has encountered stiff pushback from tenant advocates, for example, who argue it is exacerbating the housing shortage and driving up rents.So far most of the scrutiny has focused on rental apartments and homes that are converted to full-time vacation rentals, with regulators generally tolerating homeowners renting out a primary residence.There is a risk that could change.

11 June 2009 | 3 replies
HR 1728 would be extremely harmful to thousands of your constituents.It will exacerbate the problem OF foreclosure, as fewer sellers will be able to sell their homes to avoid it, and CAUSED BY foreclosure, as fewer buyers who have recently experienced foreclosure will be able to re-start the process of home ownership inexpensively and easily by negotiating owner financing.Thank you for your consideration;NAMELicensed Real Estate Broker license #Phone #email*IF YOU SELL HOUSES WITH OWNER FINANCING*Dear Senator [name];My name is Vena Jones-Cox and I am a life-long resident of Cincinnati.I am writing you to encourage you to vote NO on HR 1728, the "Mortgage Reform and Anti-Predatory Lending Act".While many of the provisions of the act are positive steps toward mortgage reform, the inclusion of private owners in the act (see section 101(3)(e)) will enormously reduce the housing choice of Ohioans and the ability of homeowners to sell properties in this already-slow market.As a professional housing provider, I sell several houses each year to home buyers on installment sale [or, if you have not purchased a property, add here: "I had planned to sell several houses this year on installment sale]--a practice that would become impossible under this law in its current form.I find that in today's slow market, the best way for me to help buyers who desperately want to become homeowners, but who cannot raise the down payment or meet the other terms needed for conventional financing, is to allow them to make payments directly to me.These sales are win-win deals for both the buyer and myself; I am able to turn over homes that I've bought and rehabbed (often from foreclosures) to buyers who love and can afford them, and the buyer can get his new home at an affordable payment and interest rates with none of the usual costs (points, application fees etc) inherent in more conventional mortgage transactions.In Ohio, these transactions are already regulated by state law: a low maximum interest rate is already in place, and both the buyer and seller are protected by other regulations at the state level.Without the ability to sell homes in this way, I will no longer be able to invest in and renovate any of the tens of thousands of vacant, ugly houses placed on the market by the foreclosure crisis, and my small-but-beneficial business will literally be in ruins.

3 April 2016 | 10 replies
The outside investor force definitely exacerbates the appreciation dynamics of the Boston A-class real estate market.

14 September 2021 | 14 replies
My opinion only, based on years of participating in this crazy industry....we have to have a correction soon, and the interest rate rise will only exacerbate that scenario.