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21 April 2009 | 17 replies
You haven't supplied much of the information necessary to evaluate this deal.
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4 June 2009 | 24 replies
Your doctor takes advantage of your need for good health, the grocer your hunger, a mechanic your broken car, the farmer supplies the grocer, the handyman (me) fixes the house you can't, won't do your self.
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3 May 2009 | 2 replies
Go to the county tax attorney with a copy of what the "owner" supplied the police when he said "we got one of those too"What he actually has will tell the tale vs what the county gave you.
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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.
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31 May 2009 | 9 replies
Yet, the bailout helped to keep the Fannie/Freddie supply-chain intact which will keep the downstream lender crack supply flowing, will enable their users (the lenders) to keep using, and will help to effectively reduce or eliminate the competition for the industrious.Of course, that's a Machiavellian way to look at the situation.
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28 May 2009 | 15 replies
v=7PC9fkLMZmo I still cannot believe that cartel (The Federal Reserve) can cut deals with international bankers, control our money supply, and yet the U.S congress is restricted (by law) from looking at the books.
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8 November 2009 | 32 replies
Secondly, depending upon the laws in your state, brokers may be required to collect EM in "a timely fashion," and 14-21 days doesn't qualify.Again, you may get lucky and find a bank willing to do this, but I wouldn't bet on it.
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26 May 2009 | 22 replies
Therefore the stocks are much less stable in the prices that are determined by supply (increasing and decreasing) and demand (increasing and decreasing) by things that we have no control upon.But housing prices also being determined by supply (stable) and demand (almost always increasing) makes it more of a sure thing than any stock purchase ever could be.The only question on the housing is the quality that is available and we as investors have some control over this as we fix up our properties.
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10 June 2009 | 11 replies
It's always a combination of location and market.My college rentals are in demand as enrollment increases.My low-income rentals are soft as businesses/government cut back hours and renters move back in with relatives.Unfortunately there's a steady supply of investors bidding up foreclosure prices in prime rental areas, sacrificing cash flow for expected appreciation.Maybe they're geniuses but it's not a bet I'm willing to make.
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1 December 2009 | 10 replies
Some rental companies have their own version, and other times you supply your own version.