
20 March 2009 | 5 replies
We had about 7% decline from peak so far.........

14 April 2009 | 44 replies
The posts are steadily increasing, not declining.

15 December 2013 | 22 replies
They keep asking me, if I have any other units available and I have to decline, because I'm full.

3 January 2014 | 10 replies
What would you do if the market declines in the next two years?

10 January 2014 | 4 replies
If your criminal record data was supplied by a consumer reporting agency, then you MUST supply a written letter explaining reason for declining the applicant.

20 April 2010 | 1 reply
If approved, the short sale process can continue, if declined, the homeowner cannot do a short sale AT ALL.

8 April 2012 | 17 replies
It's easy to do in a declining market with over assessed houses that are deteriorating with time.

6 May 2010 | 12 replies
There is a property in "short sale" status that one of my investors is interested in...when I present the investor's offer to the property owner, they decline the offer...does anyone have any suggestions on how I could get directly to the bank, and present my offer to them to almost force the property owner's hand?

9 April 2014 | 18 replies
It may increase or decline in value, but that is a paper gain that is not realized until you either sell the asset or further encumber it (if you've gained the equity to do so), meaning it will be a liability or an increased liability, but never an asset.I do have one property in CA, because I was 22 and silly and wanted a mortgage deduction more than I wanted the asset to make sense.