Hey...we have something in common. I live near Muirfield.On Jack Nicholas designed golf course....
The loan, at an interest rate of 4.75% fixed, was way to easy to qualify for. It was a short sale and the banks accepted a $200,000 loss on the outstanding loans!
anybody who owns a house on a Nicholas course is rich by average american standards, ie most ambulance chasers are.
Good deal. I closed on my home for just under 35K, when 3 years ago it was bought for 150K. And I'm looking at getting another one to sit on and wait for the market to come back.
Im looking at a townhouse that sold three years ago for $225,000, they want $75,00 for it.
T I'm trying to get at least one more house, preferably a fixer-upper, since I can do any work that needs to be done.
I wouldn't say rich. In Dublin/Muirfield village the median income is nearly double the National average.....but that's not rich. Upper middle class maybe but not rich.Whats rich?
Congrats, Jarod!
P.S. Do you mean Jack Nicklaus?![]()
:lol: oops.
There goes the neighborhood.
The house I own now I bought 13 years ago and the local market was down, albeit not like it is in some parts of the country today. The first time we saw it it had been on the market for 6 months and was well out of our range. Then it went "corporate", they hired a decorator to tone down the decor, and it sat for another year, so I low balled an offer. They came down a few thousand and I went up ten and told them "final offer", and they caved.
I had several neighbors pissed that I had brought down their comps. One guy, big tall dude, would glare at me when he went by, and eventually had a stroke and died at age 45. Another got her son to tear down my mailbox, so I rebuilt it with a 4x6, then he died in an industrial accident. She still tosses her cig butts at my mailbox on her way by; I'm waiting for her to die of lung cancer.![]()
On Jack Nicholas designed golf course....
The loan, at an interest rate of 4.75% fixed, was way to easy to qualify for. It was a short sale and the banks accepted a $200,000 loss on the outstanding loans!
:lol: oops.
There goes the neighborhood.
The house I own now I bought 13 years ago and the local market was down, albeit not like it is in some parts of the country today. The first time we saw it it had been on the market for 6 months and was well out of our range. Then it went "corporate", they hired a decorator to tone down the decor, and it sat for another year, so I low balled an offer. They came down a few thousand and I went up ten and told them "final offer", and they caved.
I had several neighbors pissed that I had brought down their comps. One guy, big tall dude, would glare at me when he went by, and eventually had a stroke and died at age 45. Another got her son to tear down my mailbox, so I rebuilt it with a 4x6, then he died in an industrial accident. She still tosses her cig butts at my mailbox on her way by; I'm waiting for her to die of lung cancer.![]()