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Argentina???you sure that insider info is valid and I doubt a CEO would engage in information unless he or sh is full of BS? hmm i thought there was a profitable merger in the US?
One company can help but never fulfill.
dont be greedy and thats my best advice to you , there are always plays being ready to play .
your smart enough to lock in. The rest can be garbage for all you care.
The $2 a share seemed a little to out of touch of reality
the slipping part is what concerns me
whats the 50dma and the only support for next week?
shorts are making a killing here .
This will give.
remember One has to take before One decides to give ;)
Rightsmile should go after Eastern Europe Russia especially ,women like to look good there .
why not put a smileshoppe next to a strip club? Dancers would love this and Im not kidding.
Become a Smileshoppe retailer benefits .....no wonder they're popping up left and right.
http://www.mysmileshoppe.com/Retailer-Benefits.html
https://www.mysmileshoppe.com/Become-a-SmileShoppe.html
RIGH offer one cant refuse Retailer Benefits.......
http://www.mysmileshoppe.com/Retailer-Benefits.html
looks like its OVER here
this will fall quicker than this next message on MONDAY ,traders need PROOF. There is none
explain to me please your pluses
company willing to merge is desperate enough enough said here GLTA
why would one merge unless they are down n the gutter?
if mortgages are well over the rent than you can forget about profits
also its in REO jobs create hunger for property and certain states have 30% unemployed so renting can be costly and well negative to the bottom line. One cant afford to pay 800 if rent can only bring in 650. Simple as one can get
I agree but there is no one buying and I assure you banks are not going to give out loans just to anyone anymore so in nature prices fall like rocks.
Well its a toss this day and age Real Estate has been hindered putting in a prospective in a nice way. I know people have been buying houses for cents and cheaper than automobiles.
ca you point out to me stable Real market this company is involved in?
The $2 deal sounds funny based on values of REO since I can value your house 50% less than current worth based on bank REPOS short sales etc. etc. in Florida and any other state combined . i tell you that 50% is a big deal and than you can wonder why all banks are going down the tubes and straight to the FDIC..
Please I will trade this if and so shall come to terms simple as water down the drain.
realist in me makes me rethink unless confirmation has been granted
this took off based on speculation of upcoming merger and now I'm just wondering if news cant confirm the deal than what will happen to stock price . Thats all
So what happens if there is no News next week? I hope it wont drop as fast as it went up.
did u get lucky?
who's selling the 0005's? dilution?hmmmmmmm
DMI looking good accu. in effect watch vol.
Kab Dental is supplying Dentigel
looks like Johnson&Johnson, Kimberly Clark ,Excel and others are also using Kab Dental as their major distributor for Dental offices/clinics nationwide . Seems like Kab is a pretty serious distributor and I doubt they would take anything to compromise their business. Also looks like Dentigel is under their newly released product section....
http://www.kabdental.com/whiteninggels/whitening_gels.html
http://www.kabdentalsupplies.com/
http://www.kabdental.com/index.htm
we do need some update
well I did call the TA and she gave me a clear number but in this market $11 billion market claim if I may say so the advantage is there for RIGH and with 10% grab the universe is expending .
Righ gets 5%-10% of the 11 billion market share through "right marketing " looks good
LET THEM GRAB 1% OF MARKET SHARE 10% IS THERE FOR TAKE
at 1% ?
A lady told me that "she wants her teeth whiter and nails done rather pay her mortgage since jobless claims and HUD help" Its GROWING I can tell you that.We are talking about 10,000,000 people in this/one State alone. Thats 10% right there knowing there is over 50 states LEFT over. hmmmm do your math
HUD offers Interest-Free Loans to Reduce Foreclosures
August 11, 2010, 3:06 PM EDT
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By Lorraine Woellert and Kathleen M. Howley
(Updates with economist’s comment in the seventh paragraph, analyst’s comment in the last paragraph.)
Aug. 11 (Bloomberg) -- The Obama administration will offer $1 billion in zero-interest loans to help homeowners who’ve lost income avoid foreclosure as part of $3 billion in additional aid targeting economically distressed areas.
The Department of Housing and Urban Development plans to make loans of as much as $50,000 for borrowers “in hard hit local areas” to make mortgage, tax and insurance payments for as long as two years, according to a statement released today. The Treasury Department will also provide as much as $2 billion in aid under an existing program for 17 states and the District of Columbia, according to the statement.
The initiatives will help “a broad group of struggling borrowers across the country and in doing so further contribute to the administration’s efforts to stabilize housing markets and communities,” Bill Apgar, HUD’s senior adviser for mortgage finance, said in the statement.
The new loan program, funded under the Wall Street overhaul President Barack Obama signed into law last month, is part of a broader effort to aid unemployed homeowners in the wake of the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression. The $2 billion in Treasury aid announced today doubles the amount already sent to housing agencies in states with unemployment rates at or above the national average during the past 12 months.
The U.S. unemployment rate probably will average 9.6 percent in 2010, based on the median estimate of 74 economists in a Bloomberg poll. That would be the highest annual rate since 1983.
Accelerating Foreclosures
The joblessness is helping accelerate foreclosures. A record 269,962 U.S. homes were seized in the second quarter, according to RealtyTrac Inc. Foreclosures probably will top 1 million this year, the Irvine, California-based data company said in a July 15 report.
“The housing sector continues to be a huge drag on the economy,” said Ted Gayer, an economist at the Washington-based Brookings Institution. “We still have excess inventory -- all the government programs we’ve had haven’t prevented that.”
HUD’s Emergency Homeowners Loan Program aims to help people who have experienced a “substantial reduction” in income because of involuntary unemployment, underemployment or a medical condition, according to the statement.
Aid recipients must be at least three months delinquent on loans and have “a reasonable likelihood” of being able to resume payments and other housing expenses within two years, HUD said. Borrowers must live in the home and demonstrate a good payment history prior to their loss of income.
“A program of this size is not going to make a large difference, but it’s a bridge,” said Joel Naroff, president of Naroff Economic Advisors in Holland, Pennsylvania. “We need the housing market to stabilize, because the better the housing market is the stronger the economic recovery is going to be.”
--With assistance from Dan Levy in San Francisco. Editors: Gregory Mott, David Scheer
To contact the reporters on this story: Lorraine Woellert in Washington at lwoellert@bloomberg.net; Kathleen M. Howley in Boston at kmhowley@bloomberg.net.
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Lawrence Roberts at lroberts13@bloomberg.net; Kara Wetzel at kwetzel@bloomberg.net.