To learn about foreclosed homes (NY), learn about the price of cattle feed | Max Returns REI

To learn about foreclosed homes (NY), learn about the price of cattle feed

I get a lot of folks who want to talk to me about Long Island real estate – they have questions about when to buy, when to sell – and I meet even more people who have questions about foreclosed homes (NY)…the reason everyone wants to get my advice is because I have been involved in over 12,000 real estate transactions since 1996. When it comes to real estate investment and how to sell Long Island homes, I am the guy to talk to…

So, with that in mind – and for those folks I was talking to the other day (you know who you are) who called me for help in selling their house, and then backed out at the last minute – I’m going to tell you why need to look more seriously at the reality of the housing market and the effect it has had on the number of foreclosed homes (NY); and the effect it’s going to have on you, if you’re not careful. And, I’m going to sum this one up for you nice and easy, folks…

Cattle feed.

That’s right…cattle feed. For those of you who are New Yorkers and are shrugging like ‘What the heck is Billy Alvaro talkin’ about now?’ – let me tell you…The cost of cattle feed in the great state of Texas, thanks to a drought that has battered dairies and cattle ranchers and farmers alike, is, in some parts of Texas, four times higher than it was at this time last year – leading $850.00 bales of hay and huge increases at the market in the cost of milk and meat.

‘C’mon, Billy,’ you’re saying, ‘what does this have to do with foreclosed homes in New York? Milk this, meat that, bales of hay…what are you talking about?’

What I’m talking about folks, is inflation. I am talking about the notion that what you are now paying $12.00 to buy will soon cost $20.00. The isolated situation unfolding in Texas might not be likely to happen on the east coast, but it has everything to do with the current number of foreclosed homes (NY). Inflation at the consumer level, even in small increments, can make it almost impossible for folks – even honest, hard-working folks who pay their taxes – to meet their monthly financial obligations. We have seen inflation across the board over the past few years, and – although you won’t read much about this in the popular press – wages have not been fairly adjusted to help American families stem the tide of rising living, healthcare, food and education costs…not by a longshot.

The upshot, folks, is a situation in which there are a whole lot of distressed home owners like yourself are reading these stories about all these foreclosed homes (NY), and how home owners are struggling, and you are saying, ‘Gosh, that sounds just like me.’ And the truth is that (even though with unemployment and inflation, it’s not your fault) YOU ARE just like the home owners in the stories…Except for one big difference: If you are reading this, then you likely still have an out.

Don’t let your home be added to the growing list of foreclosed homes (NY). There are ways to avoid having to watch the value of your home decrease with each passing day – nobody should have to live like that. Just call me, and we can figure out a way for you to avoid becoming a statistic.

Price of milk increases, why? Cost of cattle feed doubles for Texas dairies, leads to the kind of inflation that makes it downright impossible for regular every day folks to even close to having the chance to pay for All of their needs – let alone the mortgage. Compounded with the economy and the unemployment rate, the fact is that people should be doing whatever they can to trim down their expenses.

One thing, if you are living in a house you cannot afford, Sell now.

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