I only read the headlines, so I got nothing
We have a rising market in large part from foreign all cash purchases, too.
Fundamentals of typical first time and/or move up buyers absolutely suck.
Supply will further tighten as the homeless Hondurans find assistance into waterfront 'quasi'-government owned homes.
We have a rising market in large part from foreign all cash purchases, too.
Fundamentals of typical first time and/or move up buyers absolutely suck.
Supply will further tighten as the homeless Hondurans find assistance into waterfront 'quasi'-government owned homes.
I heard that exact same thing from Rush this morning. Nice work.
Rush > StyxWe have a rising market in large part from foreign all cash purchases, too.
Fundamentals of typical first time and/or move up buyers absolutely suck.
Supply will further tighten as the homeless Hondurans find assistance into waterfront 'quasi'-government owned homes.
I heard that exact same thing from Rush this morning. Nice work.
The beauty of your schtick is that you can invent anything you want and call it truth... and still get paid.
There is a shadow inventory of bank owned and foreclosure ready houses that the banks have done a masterful job of playing a shell game with to prop up prices on the ones they let to market.
In the early foreclosure days there was so much inventory that it was both an investor and buyer paradise. The banks want the money.
Government regulation to "help" people keep their homes (for awhile) plays right in to that.
The reduceddemandsupply is why new homes became profitable to build again.
Just keep in mine we are in another bubble and they always pop. And its still anemic anyway. You don't need to be a Rush dick sucker to know that if you use percentages compared to the worst of the crash you can pretend things are great.
There is a shadow inventory of bank owned and foreclosure ready houses that the banks have done a masterful job of playing a shell game with to prop up prices on the ones they let to market.
In the early foreclosure days there was so much inventory that it was both an investor and buyer paradise. The banks want the money.
Government regulation to "help" people keep their homes (for awhile) plays right in to that.
The reduced demand is why new homes became profitable to build again.
Just keep in mine we are in another bubble and they always pop. And its still anemic anyway. You don't need to be a Rush dick sucker to know that if you use percentages compared to the worst of the crash you can pretend things are great.
There is a shadow inventory of bank owned and foreclosure ready houses that the banks have done a masterful job of playing a shell game with to prop up prices on the ones they let to market.
In the early foreclosure days there was so much inventory that it was both an investor and buyer paradise. The banks want the money.
Government regulation to "help" people keep their homes (for awhile) plays right in to that.
The reduced demand is why new homes became profitable to build again.
Just keep in mine we are in another bubble and they always pop. And its still anemic anyway. You don't need to be a Rush dick sucker to know that if you use percentages compared to the worst of the crash you can pretend things are great.
That was so 4 years ago. Ask Kim, he'll tell you the shadow inventory is gone.
But seriously, drive around, there aren't really vacant homes and homes are selling quickly. If you can see that, I can't help you.
Protip, if you ever find yourself arguing that someone should "Ask Kim" anything, you've already lost the argument.There is a shadow inventory of bank owned and foreclosure ready houses that the banks have done a masterful job of playing a shell game with to prop up prices on the ones they let to market.
In the early foreclosure days there was so much inventory that it was both an investor and buyer paradise. The banks want the money.
Government regulation to "help" people keep their homes (for awhile) plays right in to that.
The reduced demand is why new homes became profitable to build again.
Just keep in mine we are in another bubble and they always pop. And its still anemic anyway. You don't need to be a Rush dick sucker to know that if you use percentages compared to the worst of the crash you can pretend things are great.
That was so 4 years ago. Ask Kim, he'll tell you the shadow inventory is gone.
But seriously, drive around, there aren't really vacant homes and homes are selling quickly. If you can see that, I can't help you.
There is a shadow inventory of bank owned and foreclosure ready houses that the banks have done a masterful job of playing a shell game with to prop up prices on the ones they let to market.
In the early foreclosure days there was so much inventory that it was both an investor and buyer paradise. The banks want the money.
Government regulation to "help" people keep their homes (for awhile) plays right in to that.
The reduced demand is why new homes became profitable to build again.
Just keep in mine we are in another bubble and they always pop. And its still anemic anyway. You don't need to be a Rush dick sucker to know that if you use percentages compared to the worst of the crash you can pretend things are great.
That was so 4 years ago. Ask Kim, he'll tell you the shadow inventory is gone.
But seriously, drive around, there aren't really vacant homes and homes are selling quickly. If you can see that, I can't help you.