Monday, June 6, 2011

Mortgage and Loans - Mortgage Refinance, Home Loans

Mortgage and Loans - Mortgage Refinance, Home Loans


Buying a Home in Santa Monica, CA

Posted: 05 Jun 2011 11:38 PM PDT

Santa Monica, California is a famous beach community. As the birthplace of the popular “California Cuisine” type of food, Santa Monica continues to update and reinvent, making it a delight for both residents and visitors alike. This is a visually stunning city, with the pounding Pacific Ocean at its edge, a town full of architectural delights, and public art found in sometimes surprising places. The city has added the Third Street Promenade to its Pier area. This brought new recreational amenities to the shore front, including Palisades Park, Muscle Beach and Chess Park.

As a part of Los Angeles County, Santa Monica supports a population of nearly 90,000 people. The median age of a resident here is 39 years old, with an annual household income of approximately $52,000 per year. A typical resident in Santa Monica is well educated and employed in a professional position. In fact, two employment sectors dominate the local economy. The vast majority of Santa Monica residents, nearly sixteen percent, are employed in the areas of professional services, the sciences and technology. Information services follows at a close second, employing nearly fifteen percent of local residents.

The city is ideally located on the Santa Monica Bay. With such breath-taking natural beauty, the town was originally developed as a resort community. Santa Monica today preserves the feel of a resort town. Its many amenities, events, and temperate year-round climate have its residents feeling truly pampered every day of the year.

For shopping, there’s nowhere like Santa Monica. The city perpetuates five distinct shopping districts. The downtown area is home to the Third Street Promenade. It has a casual atmosphere, full of open-air cafes, kiosks, and boutiques. Here you will also find the Frank Gehry-designed Santa Monica Place shopping center, with over 140 boutiques offering the most one of a kind and chic items from around the world. The Main Street district is an eclectic assortment of galleries and shops, with surprising hidden courtyards. The Montana Avenue shopping district is the place to spot celebrities, as well as the home of some nineteen incredible restaurants. Finally, the Sunset Pico area is a diverse collection of retail options, offering everything from hardware stores to one-of-a-kind art pieces.

Upstate Mortgage Loan Brokers in Greenville

Posted: 05 Jun 2011 09:34 PM PDT

Settling down in South Carolina? Upstate Mortgage, with three offices in the state, has over 15 years experience handling mortgages and helping folks like you buy, finance and refinance their homes. Whether it’s your first home, 50th home or vacation home, these brokers, all South Carolinians themselves, offer honest appraisals, answers and advice. Come see why Upstate Mortgage has won all those awards! Visit us www.yellowpages.com

Mortgage market and interest rate update for Tuesday, December 23rd, 2008

Posted: 05 Jun 2011 07:48 PM PDT

Mortgage market and interest rate update from Bruce Brown, CMPS with First Security Mortgage and radio host of Dollars and Homes on KCMO Talk Radio 710 in Kansas City.

How many units do i need to have in college to stay on my parents insurance?

Posted: 05 Jun 2011 05:02 PM PDT

Last semester I was told that i would need 12 units to stay on my parents insurance. So, i did so, having 12 units to secure myself health insurance.
This semester my father told that Obama passed a new insurance plan for any amount of credits being able to keep you on the insurance?
I am lost and would like to know for future reference.
How many units would i need to stay on the insurance my parents have.
Thank you.

Gucci Mane- “Payday” (Feat. Game) (HQ)

Posted: 05 Jun 2011 02:21 PM PDT

Gucci Mane – “Payday” (Feat. Game) Gucci Mane – “Payday” (Feat. Game) Gucci Mane – “Payday” (Feat. Game) Gucci Mane – “Payday” (Feat. Game)

1. Why Finance?

Posted: 05 Jun 2011 07:12 AM PDT

Financial Theory (ECON 251) This lecture gives a brief history of the young field of financial theory, which began in business schools quite separate from economics, and of my growing interest in the field and in Wall Street. A cornerstone of standard financial theory is the efficient markets hypothesis, but that has been discredited by the financial crisis of 2007-09. This lecture describes the kinds of questions standard financial theory nevertheless answers well. It also introduces the leverage cycle as a critique of standard financial theory and as an explanation of the crisis. The lecture ends with a class experiment illustrating a situation in which the efficient markets hypothesis works surprisingly well. Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website: open.yale.edu This course was recorded in Fall 2009.

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