Use a CDPE to ease the pain of an unstable and confusing real estate market!

Need to ease the pain of an unstable and confusing real estate market?

A Certified Distressed Property Expert® (CDPE) has a thorough understanding of complex issues in today’s turbulent real estate industry and knowledge of foreclosure avoidance options available to homeowners. CDPEs can provide solutions, specifically short sales, for homeowners facing market hardships.

Homeowners regularly proceed without guidance of any kind through the often financially and emotionally devastating prospect of foreclosure. Speaking with a well-informed, licensed real estate professional is the best course of action for a homeowner in distress. Through comprehensive training and experience, CDPEs have the tools to help homeowners find the best solutions for their unique situations and to avoid foreclosure through the efficient execution of a short sale.

Living through financial difficulties poses a challenge for any family, so why make the process of finding a qualified real estate professional difficult too? Select an agent with the CDPE Designation to ensure you have a trained professional to address your specific needs. For more information, contact a CDPE in your area.

CDPEs don’t merely assist in selling properties, they serve and help save their clients in need.

Call South Florida’s Green Realty Properties and list your home with internationally recognized CDPE Broker

Patty Da Silva, CDPE Broker ~ (954) 667-SALE (7253)

Supreme Court sustains health care act

The Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the Obama administration’s Affordable Care Act. The decision was five to four, with Chief Justice John Roberts voting with four of the court’s more liberal justices. Their ruling found that the law’s controversial “individual mandate” clause, which requires individuals to buy health insurance or pay a fee, is constitutional. The administration called the fee a “penalty,” but the court said today that the fee is not a penalty, which would be unconstitutional, but rather a “tax,” which is constitutional. Wall Street estimated the decision would help hospital companies and insurance companies that focus on Medicaid.

 

 

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Supreme Court sustains health care act

Affordable Care Act: A crisis wasted?

In 2008, when President Obama was then president-elect, his chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel, famously said, “You never want a serious crisis to go to waste.” People on the right excoriated him for taking such a Machiavellian view of politics, but he had a good point. In fact, Franklin Delano Roosevelt used the pain of the Great Depression to transform the U.S. economy, and Ronald Reagan used extremely high unemployment in the 1980s to drive through tax reform in 1981. A crisis can often be a catalyst for significant change.

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Affordable Care Act: A crisis wasted?

ESG Notes, Vol. 13

 

Environmental Forum readers, here is the latest version of our ESG (Environmental, Social, Governance) Notes compiled each week by Adam Berkowitz. If you have any questions or comments about Nelson Capital’s ESG notes, please leave them for Adam below or visit our website

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ESG Notes, Vol. 13

Crime doesn’t pay (much)

A report showing an improvement in the housing market gave stocks a boost, but concerns about Europe and a disappointing consumer confidence report kept gains modest.

The Dow advanced 32 points, well off of its highs, with 16 of its 30 components gaining ground; the S&P 500 rose 6; and the Nasdaq was higher by 17. Advancers led decliners by seven to four on the NYSE and four to three on the Nasdaq. The prices of Treasuries weakened. Gold futures fell $13.50 to close at $1,574.90 an ounce, and the price of crude oil staged a last-minute recovery, rising 15 cents to settle at $79.36 a barrel.

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Crime doesn’t pay (much)