
1 April 2013 | 7 replies
I would think this information would be public information and therefore free to obtain.

11 November 2009 | 36 replies
The results have been poor to say the least: Interest rates near zero (failed), quantitative easing (failed), public spending (failed), numerous attempts to drive down the value of the yen (failed); the list is long and makes for painful reading.We are effectively caught in a liquidity trap.

9 April 2010 | 16 replies
Also, please note that if the lender declines the terms of the short sale that the lender may pursue a foreclosure action against you and the foreclosure will not stop and will proceed with a sale date ultimately being entered and the property being sold at public auction if some action is not taken by you to resolve the delinquency with your lender); and (b) providing all title work for the closing.

16 November 2009 | 31 replies
What was Obama's response when asked if he would be covered under the same plan provided through the public option?

1 April 2008 | 4 replies
We are being spoon fed the scarf and barf results of public opinion polls and special interest agendas every time one of these talking heads open their mouths.

30 April 2008 | 8 replies
There would be a public outcry.My opinion as to why the did this was to make people show up and sit through all the extra high pressure sales gurus.
3 August 2008 | 20 replies
In addition, with gas at $4 per gallon and food price inflation skyrocketing, the American public is on the verge of financial disaster.

22 September 2016 | 55 replies
Proxy Services - You will need a different IP address and it will have to be tied to your are so you can't use public IPs, they will have to be private.

13 December 2008 | 8 replies
There are independent companies that, for a small fee, will conduct an occupancy check for the lender.Digital Risk, a company based in Dallas, is developing a patented system of logarithms that can tap into up to 20 different public and private databases to alert lenders to the possibility that a borrower may not be occupying the house he is buying.