$8,000 homebuyer credit to be raised to $15,000

Quote from kxvid:

8k credits for 1st time homebuyers was/ is far beyond what the money supply can handle. Now this...

You have no clue.
The Money Supply has been declining recently.
 
Quote from peilthetraveler:

Sorry i dont have a link. I was in grocery store this morning and saw this on the front page of i think it was USA today. But I went to their website and couldnt find it. But from what i read, they are considering to raise the 8,000 dollar credit to 15,000 soon and if i read right, its not just going to be for first time home buyers...it will be for everyone.

If you wait long enough, im sure the government will just buy you a house. Government owned banks, Government owned Cars, Government supplys the food, socialized medicine, and soon it will be socialized housing.

When will the people wake up?

There is a whole herd cahing in on Santa Klaus Obama

where I live. Better get it before it runs out.
 
Quote from peilthetraveler:

Sorry i dont have a link. I was in grocery store this morning and saw this on the front page of i think it was USA today. But I went to their website and couldnt find it. But from what i read, they are considering to raise the 8,000 dollar credit to 15,000 soon and if i read right, its not just going to be for first time home buyers...it will be for everyone.

If you wait long enough, im sure the government will just buy you a house. Government owned banks, Government owned Cars, Government supplys the food, socialized medicine, and soon it will be socialized housing.

When will the people wake up?

The sheeple don't want to wake up.
Cause then they would have to assume personal responsibility and live within their means.

Handouts are easier.
 
They eliminated the $15,000 buyer credit in Feb 2009, the cost of this would have added $35.5 Billion to the stimulus plan bill.

I guess they see that the $8000 tax credit isn't working so in order to stabilize the economy they need to put a DEFINITE floor on the housing market. All I keep hearing is that the only way the economy actually turns around is when the housing market turns, throwing $15,000 to anyone buying a house will probably create a buying frenzy that will most likely create higher prices in housing over the short term.
 
Quote from peilthetraveler:

15k in your pocket that you dont have to pay back...ever.

California already subsidizes the 8k with another 10k.

They are throwing money away...of course it will pass. These laws only dont pass if it SAVES taxpayer money.


California are giving home buyers a huge break with that kind money, even in areas where houses are down 50% in value over the last 18 months.

Like I said this is not the way to treat any kind of market, if they would let the pieces of the puzzle fall where they may land it would create a real market place, putting an invisible floor under the housing market will only create more complex issues down the road.
 
You can always start a company and apply for TARP funds.

Failing that, give meager campaign donations and then do back room deals for no-bid contracts at 1000% inflated prices.



Quote from texrex2002:

Man, I sure get to pay for a lot of people's shit...

It's fucking extortion, is what it is...
 
Quote from fkbsuhites:

You can always start a company and apply for TARP funds.

Failing that, give meager campaign donations and then do back room deals for no-bid contracts at 1000% inflated prices.

I like it. Not that it's even remotely just or "right," but it would help keep the balance a little until we can stop all of the wasteful nonsense altogether.

I'd settle for being able to get a piece of the PPIP (or whatever it's called; the thing where bank A buys bank B's toxic assets and vice-vera for 98% of par, then writes them down to 20% and the Fed pays 80% of the difference). Arbitrage in its finest textbook incarnation. I'd put my whole retirement into it...
 
Quote from S2007S:

California are giving home buyers a huge break with that kind money, even in areas where houses are down 50% in value over the last 18 months.

Like I said this is not the way to treat any kind of market, if they would let the pieces of the puzzle fall where they may land it would create a real market place, putting an invisible floor under the housing market will only create more complex issues down the road.

how long is the California deal going to be offered?
 
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