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Commercial Investment Real Estate Sep/Oct 2009 Andrew Dick |
Understanding Federal Healthcare Laws Commercial real estate professionals who work with medical office development must be aware of the federal healthcare fraud and abuse laws. |
Investment Advisor September 2009 Melanie Waddell |
Retirement Planning: Time for Non-Traded REITs? Retail commercial real estate could be a good investment for retirees. |
The Motley Fool August 31, 2009 Dan Caplinger |
This Could Be the Best Move You Ever Make The plummeting housing market hasn't just thrown millions of homeowners under the wheels of their mortgage debt; it has also thrown into question whether buying a home really ever makes economic sense. |
The Motley Fool August 25, 2009 Morgan Housel |
You Call This a Cure? Cure rates on mortgage delinquencies have fallen off a cliff. Why is that, and what does it mean for banks? |
The Motley Fool August 24, 2009 Toby Shute |
Cure Rates and Housing Disease People are talking about a housing bottom today? Despite the share price recoveries among beaten-down builders like Lennar and D.R. Horton, I remain skeptical. |
BusinessWeek July 30, 2009 James C. Cooper |
A Housing Upturn Suggests Recovery Is Near Price declines, low mortgage rates, and first-time buyer perks are sparking real estate gains -- and the beginning of the end of the recession |
The Motley Fool July 30, 2009 Morgan Housel |
How Long Can Annaly Keep This Up? For now, yes. Forever, no. |
The Motley Fool July 28, 2009 Morgan Housel |
This Is Killing Housing Prices And it ain't letting up anytime soon. As home prices crater, the incentive to give your home back to the bank -- even if you can afford the monthly payments -- grows by the day. |
The Motley Fool July 9, 2009 Dan Caplinger |
Let's Stop the Housing Crisis Once and for All It's hard to believe how easily it all could have been prevented. By simply following an old-fashioned standard for taking out a mortgage loan |
The Motley Fool July 9, 2009 Morgan Housel |
Could This Prevent Another Housing Blowup? A house is not an investment -- it's a place to live, and nothing more. Artificially supporting a degree of risk that encourages failure is nuts, since homes are incapable of innovating into anything beyond what they've always been. |
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