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12 November 2007 | 3 replies
At that time, my current job would pay me 70% of my salary at the time...I also have my 401k and IRA to supplement that to (hopefully) pretty close to 100% of that salary.Like I said, I just turned 39.
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14 November 2007 | 5 replies
Remittence of wages back to families in Poland, reduction in housing demand in Poland, people investing back in Poland as a long term investment all could be factors in specific cities.
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23 December 2007 | 10 replies
Sure buyers are in demand and sellers are unresonable..
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26 November 2018 | 37 replies
More costly and fewer loans may result less homes being purchased and repaired which in turn means less demand for homes and lower prices and more homes that are in disrepair and “eye soars” dragging down property values.
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20 January 2008 | 25 replies
If you don't know how to install Pex, learn, its next great thing, in high demand, since homes are being stripped of copper and pretty easy to install.
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15 September 2008 | 22 replies
I sent them a certified letter demanding possession already.
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29 November 2007 | 2 replies
i wonder if anyone can talk alittle about recovering earnest money. my particular situation was, a contract was signed, i put down 1000.00 for earnest money. when the closing date came, the contract expired, and we did not close that day. my lender was waiting for documents from the sellers bank involving the foreclosure the property was in. a full week went by, and i changed my mind, and notified my lender that i would not buy this property. 4 days later i was being contacted by the realtors that everything was set to close. we were out of contract, and now the seller refuses to release the 1000.00 back. he is demanding that i pay him 3000.00 dollars for his troubles. i told him i would give him the 1000.00, but he wanted more. we are in oklahoma, which probably explains it all, but if anyone can speak to this issue, i would appreciate it so much...
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4 December 2007 | 8 replies
I cant really find a formula or anything that says how much below appraisial value makes it a good deal. it was a lot easier to assess value in a good market, because it seemed like anything below appraisal was worth the investment. however now that the supply out weighs the demand in most areas. i have no idea how to correctly judge value. anyone have any tips, or theories?
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14 January 2008 | 33 replies
But when the stock market crashed on October 29, 1929, brokers demanded that their clients pay back their loans.
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12 December 2007 | 4 replies
I also spent the last 3 years using online poker to supplement my income, which has worked nicely.