
1 May 2021 | 300 replies
They mow the lawn, shovel the snow, plant flowers and take care of minor maintenance.The best that I have ever been able to do was 11% expense ratio.

11 June 2008 | 3 replies
Fast forward to the 1990s, the Yen had plummeted and the Japanese investors were abandoning their US holdings and suffering huge losses.

2 March 2019 | 147 replies
I’ve seen many families suffer from a lack of proper estate planning.

19 November 2023 | 18 replies
This is why you will often see large and successful manufacturing plants out in the middle of nowhere in places like Ohio and Indiana.

19 November 2023 | 5 replies
I thought FHA & VA were government backed insured, so the servicer doesn't suffer loss?

1 August 2021 | 2 replies
The plant is expected to total 1 million square feet....Gorrill said the site that the company has chosen, at MC 85 and Interstate 10, is perfect because it has easy access to the interstate and there will be an APS substation nearby.

29 March 2022 | 6 replies
We researched a lot of markets before planting our flag in North Carolina.

30 April 2022 | 1 reply
The stock market is down 2,200 points in the last 10 days, there was a negative -1.4 growth for last quarter, recession is pending, ships are stalled in China because they have locked down the city and can't load, the auto industry can't get computer chips to finish cars, mortgage rates are up, fertilizer isn't shipping and this is the planting season so there are going to be food shortages, Wells Fargo laid off 550 mortgage lenders which means lending is tightening, Deutche Bank is being investigated for money laundering and food processing plants are mysteriously catching fire.Doing pretty well myself, how about you?

3 June 2023 | 23 replies
People suffered rather than notified me of a drug dealer (though I did have 'running up and down the stairs all the time' noise complaints and I just didn't understand what it meant until I saw it when I was onsite doing improvements.

17 September 2022 | 15 replies
I’ve never seen a real estate contract that pays a buyer more than they’ve suffered in actual damages.