
4 June 2009 | 24 replies
He always has only 2 responses:1) you cannot do that here (i'm serious)2) what you're trying to do is rip someone offNo matter how hard I try to explain that I want to create a win-win situation, he has this core belief that if you're "making money off somebody" then you're scamming them.

4 May 2009 | 6 replies
Read this Bernanke presentation carefully - it is about as precise as any study I've ever read.My belief about the money supply (M2/M3, not M0 and generally not M1) is probably as close as any, but the DEFLATION caused the most pain in the contraction phase (we're in that now and gaining momentum) - it FELL 30 percent, rather similar to today's RE/Fuel/Machinery pricing trends.

28 May 2009 | 15 replies
Listening to Republicans and republican policy supporters moan just reinforces my belief that they have learned nothing and deserve no support whatsoever until they acknowledge their part and apologize for this mess and their destructive policies.Hyper-inflation is definitely one of many possible outcomes of trying to save people from collapse in their lives, but what you do differently besides the hands-off, let the financial system work things out themselves attitudes the got us here.

8 June 2009 | 33 replies
They're equally as responsible for the mess this country is in as the fed and us fools that voted them in there.

30 May 2009 | 8 replies
The answer is: you should treat the home you're buying like an investment property equally.

10 June 2009 | 11 replies
Just wondering what the thoughts are on this? If areas have a high foreclosure rate, is there a high demand for rental properties as people still need a place to live?
A friend of mine was telling me he knows someon...

21 October 2009 | 35 replies
So if ARV is 150K and repairs are 40K, ARV minus repairs equals 110K. 50% of that is 55K so that is his offer.

31 May 2009 | 0 replies
He also happens to have 5 siblings who have an equal share of the building.

24 January 2011 | 12 replies
The gross rental income from the property is equal to the lesser of the market rent established by the appraiser or the current rent based on existing lease agreement.3.

5 June 2009 | 6 replies
Contrary to popular belief, your time is worth something.