Financial News & Information.

February 6, 2009

Right time to buy a Minneapolis Condominiums

The largest metropolitan area in the state of Minnesota is the greater Minneapolis St. Paul area and it has become popular place for new home owners. The hottest areas for Minneapolis condominiums are North Warehouse District, North Quadrant Region, and St. Paul’s Lowertown, you can find many condo developments along the Mississippi river.

Many of these condos were conversion or factory and warehouse buildings that had stable foundation and solid structures for the conversion. Some of these Minneapolis condominiums can range from $400,000 in the lower end to over $1,800,000 for a luxury penthouse condos. There also number of high rise new developments and luxury condos with spectacular view of the skyline are available.

Even with current recession, the market probably has seen the bottoming of prices. The inventories of condos under $400,000 have been dwindling and no now development is happening anytime soon. Many local experts are seeing price bottoming in Mills District and North Loop areas where prices are affordable at about $300,000.

If you are thinking of selling your Minneapolis condominiums keep in mind that the average days on the market is about 108 days, about 28 percent above last year. The inventories have decrease for downtown and available inventories for sale have decreased about 30 percent.

The positive news is hat the average median price have increased by 6 percent. Foreclosure rates in Twin Cities real estate market has been around 35 percent, but the foreclosure rate of condos have remained at about 8 percent which is well below the national level.

One thin for sure, the real estate market will rebound with rebound of the economy. Right now the market maybe at the lower end at this point, new buyers will be into the market beginning with spring where many buyers move or buy new homes. Make sure you have patience to wait for the right property at right price and right location.

January 24, 2009

Daytrading the ABCD Fibonacci Pattern (Forex Trading)

Filed under: Currency Trading — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , — Darren Warmuth @ 5:23 pm

Daytrading the ABCD Fibonacci Pattern (Forex Trading)

Filed under: Currency Trading — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , — Darren Warmuth @ 5:23 pm

December 28, 2008

IX Investor 08 – London (Part 3 of 3)

Filed under: Currency Trading — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , — Darren Warmuth @ 2:33 am

December 12, 2008

How is Forex Brotherhood software ,is anyone using it personally?

Filed under: Software, foreign exchange — Tags: , , , , , , — admin @ 12:02 pm
forex
lubdov asked:

I have recently seen the promotion of Forex brotherhood.I am planning to invest in it,but scared is it worthwhile to invest in it.I mean do they live up to the hype and claims they are making?
And how they are differnet from other automated Forex Trading softwares.Can anyone please advice .Thanks

November 30, 2008

College Financial Aid

Filed under: finance — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , — Jimmy Johnson @ 2:02 pm

Deciding whether to go to college, to continue in education for 4 more years, is one of those really big crossroads decisions that people face in life. It is an emotional, social, spiritual, intellectual and fundamentally a financial decision. It is an investment decision, because you are putting money into your brain asset now in order to earn far greater (hopefully) returns throughout the rest of your working life. The risk with this investment is of course debt. Some fortunate folks start out with enough money, from parents or whoever, to finance their intellectual investment without borrowing. Most folks however will have to take on some debt. Private colleges can mean up to $100,000 or more. It is always best to have an investment repayment plan worked out ahead of enrolment and college financial aid offices can help.

Realistically as part of your investment plan you must ask yourself how many scholarships can you gain? Scholarships are the best kind of money in that they are FREE! No repayments means you would be crazy not to put lots of effort into gaining all the scholarships you can. Colleges tend to provide money on two bases. Firstly money according to your needs which is directly related to your parents income and how many of your brothers and sisters will need investment money too. Your investment plan needs to answer two questions here. Will your parents contribute financially (all colleges assume they will)? Will you repay them or is it free money?

Merit-based financial aid is based on your grades and your activities from high school. Private colleges are much more likely to give out large merit-based scholarships than public colleges since the private schools usually have more donors who set up scholarships in their names or contribute to a certain scholarship fund. These institutional scholarships can cover up to half of your tuition, or more, every year.

Like any intelligent investor you need to investigate all possible sources of finance. So get on the Internet and search the local charitable organizations such as the Knights of Columbus and the Humane Society. Every little helps as they say and free money will save you a lot in debt repayments over the years in college and after.

Any savings you have should be used only when all other monies have been put into your education. Why? Well because they continue to earn interest of course. But surely the time will come when you need to take a loan. First port of call has to be the Federal Application for Student Aid (FAFSA). There you will find out which loans you qualify for and you can then work out a repayment plan. A good tip when doing investment planning is to estimate your future income, then reduce it by 20%. Then estimate your expenditure and increase it by 20%. This will ensure that your expectations are never high to cause anxiety when not met.

Copyright 2009 Financial News & Information Sitemap