Mexico Mortgage Center
Information on Mortgages in Mexico

Should i move to Mexico?

mexico mortgages
Ric asked:


I’m tired of paying my $4,000 monthly mortgage, if i move to Mexico i can buy an equivalent suburban home for $50,000. Plus i hear young hott mexican women love Americans, should i move or stay in the U.S.?

mexico wholesale mortgage
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Posted by Admin on June 28th, 2009 :: Filed under Politics
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If a U.S. gay couple visits Canada, gets married there, and returns to the U.S., is their marriage recognized?

mexico mortgages
Healthy Environment asked:


I would think the answer is yes………because:
this site: http://www.samesexmarriage.ca/legal/ontario_case/appeal/pride_week_marriage.htm
states the following:
“they will be as married as any people on the planet. That means, for example, the couples will identify as married on applications/forms for jobs, apartments, credit, mortgages, insurance, medical treatment, and taxes.”

However, if a gay couple gets married in another country besides Canada……..such as norway, spain, belgium, south africa, or the netherlands…….and then moves to the U.S…….their marriage will only be recognized in 3 states: New York, Rhode Island, New Mexico.

It seems like Canada & the U.S. have a litle tea party agreement that they recognize each other’s marriages…..but when we’re talking about a different foreign country, the rules are different.

so my question is: Does everything I just said sound accurate? Is this pretty much true?

mortgage lending in mexico

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Posted by Admin on June 19th, 2009 :: Filed under Law & Ethics
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OMG PLEASE HELP WITH AS MUCH AS YOU CAN- Worst subject?

mexico mortgages
XxXprincessXxX asked:


you dont have to give me answers, just explain and help me eliminate answers. PLEAE HELP ME 10 PTS FOR FIRST ANSWER THATS NOT STUPID!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

1. Which of the following is an example of the barter system? (1 point)
Instead of paying rent, you clean the house for the owner.
Instead of paying cash for a computer, you use a credit card.
Instead of paying the full amount for a car, you pay 10 percent in cash and pay for the rest in monthly installments.
Instead of paying for a purchase in Mexico in pesos, you use dollars from the United States.
2. What is the purpose of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)? (1 point)
to make sure that banks do not fail
to make sure that customers do not lose money if a bank fails
to make sure that banks charge a fair amount of interest on loans
to make sure that the government has enough gold to cover its expenses
3. What did the Federalists believe about banking? (1 point)
They believed that they banking system already in existence was sufficient.
They believed an international banking system would be best.
They believed that a centralized banking system was necessary.
They believed that state governments should own and run the nation’s banks.
4. What is a mortgage used to purchase? (1 point)
car
real estate
college tuition
business expenses
5. Why is using coins as money easier than using gold bars? (1 point)
coins are more durable
coins are more portable
coins are more uniform
coins are more limited in supply
6. What happens when you make a purchase using a credit card? (1 point)
The credit card issuer pays the store.
The money is immediately deducted from your account.
The amount of the purchase is deducted from a prepaid account.
The place where you made the purchase receives the money within 24 hours.
7. What is the largest source of income for banks? (1 point)
the interest they receive from loans
fees charged to customers for accounts
money deposited in savings accounts
special accounts such as NOW accounts
8. When you pay for a new CD with a debit card, you authorize the transfer of money from your account to the music store’s account. In other words, a payment by debit card is the electronic form of a payment by
(1 point)
money order.
credit card.
check.
cashier’s check.
9. Which of the following statements is true?
(1 point)
Money is a medium of exchange.
Money is a unit of account.
Money serves as a store of value.
all of the above
10. In the 1990s, the Russian people lost confidence in the value of the ruble, and many were no longer willing to sell goods and services in exchange for Russian currency. Which characteristic of money did the Russian currency lack? (1 point)
acceptability
uniformity
limited supply
durability
11. The main advantage of diversification as an investment policy is that it (1 point)
reduces risk to investors.
increases investors’ access to their money.
offsets the effects of inflation on investments.
guarantees a fixed rate of return on an investment.
12. An accurate statement about bonds would be that (1 point)
they insured by the FDIC.
they are generally held for 3 or 6 months.
they are usually a low-risk investment.
they entitle the holder to a share of ownership in a corporation.
13. An example of equity is
(1 point)
a treasury bond.
a share of stock.
a treasury bill.
a long-term certificate of deposit.
14. All of the following are low-risk investments EXCEPT (1 point)
junk bonds.
treasury bonds.
municipal bonds.
savings bonds.
15. A stock that reinvests its earnings in the business instead of paying regular dividends is called (1 point)
an income stock.
a common stock.
preferred stock.
a growth stock.
16. In June, Leslie wins a cash prize of $2,000. She plans to use this money to pay her tuition bill in September. Leslie puts this money in a savings account because her main priority is (1 point)
receiving the maximum amount of interest possible.
taking a risk in hopes that she’ll get a high return.
liquidity, since she’ll need to use the money in a short time.
making a safe long term investment.
17. Against your better judgement, you lend $100 to your cousin Manny, who has a reputation for failing to pay back loans. You are taking a (1 point)
liquidity risk.
time risk.
inflamtion rate rate risk.
credit risk.
18. Since bonds are considered among the safest investments, you would expect that they would (1 point)
mature quickly.
have high interest rates.
take a long time to mature.
have low interest rates.
19. The Great Crash can be attributed to all of the following reasons EXCEPT (1 point)
many people had gone into debt buying consumer items on credit.
the practice of making high-risk investments with borrowed money.
the small number of people buying stock on margin.
a relatively few companies and families held much of the nation’s wealth.
20. You are a financial ad

mexico mortgages

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Posted by Admin on June 15th, 2009 :: Filed under Other - Education
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what are the steps for my husband to come back legally under voluntary departure?

home loans mexico
Angel asked:


ok well my husband and i have been married for a year now and hes been in mexico since june of last year.. he left under voluntary departure and on time.. in all of his paper work it doesnt say anything but that he was just undocumented.. wasnt driving or working and caught just a complaint of several illegals so they went with a warrant and picked my husband and another guy up.. the only past history he has had is driving with out a US lisence and the cop let him finsh driving home and he had a court date which he attended and paid the fine.. we have no kids together or what so ever and he only left me here with around $4,000 in debt so not a lot.. no previous marriages for either of us.. he crossed here illegally and was here for about 5 years… im 19 and he is 22… i just finished high school and would like to continue with college but i work a full time 12 hour shift in a book manufacturing company so i really have no time.. im depressed but i do not want to see a doctor for this b/c i want to go into the medical feild and do not want anything agianst me that may hurt me from getting a job.. i have went to mexico to see him and im going agian in 8 weeks… at one point i had 2 jobs for about 5 months just to get some of the bills paid up to date b/c when he left it made it hard for me to pay the bills and i had tons of late fees and i was still in high school and only had a part time job with 2 car payments and both cell phones a credit cards.. i have prove showing we were a couple like pictures of us and me with his family, him with mine… i had to sell his car to pay off a loan that i had gotten to bail him out of jail so he could do his voluntary departure.. i think i explained everything pretty well in detail.. but the things his is that he wants to come back and trust me i want him back here its very hard without him.. but since he wasnt charged with anything but being undocumented can he just gat a visa or can we do the I-130(which we did one time but was denied due to lack of us getting other documents in on itme will that hurt it?) or do we need the waivers… he has talked about coming back illegally and if he does can we do the papers over here? my parents are going to loan me the money for the lawyers and all and they said a max. of $10,000 which we have to pay back when he gets back.. what are the possibilites of everything going through ok and him getting to come home and how long will it take and what are the steps that we need to do for him to come back here legally?

mortgage for mexico
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Posted by Admin on June 13th, 2009 :: Filed under Immigration
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What do you think? Good, bad, uninteresting?

mexico mortgages
johnlong_1987 asked:


Introduction:

Peter Carson of Farmington, New Mexico is a 34 year old struggling farmer who has been experiencing an ever-increasing suspicion that his wife, Martha, is having an affair with a local 25 year old college student named Patrick Delaware. Patrick, according to Martha, is a good, handsome young man with his head situated evenly and sturdily on his shoulders. Peter, having been subjected to ungodly amounts of agonizing stress due to a drought that has afflicted his land for two years running, begins to suspect that his wife’s fascination with this young man is deeper than mere admiration.

We will join Peter as he is just on the verge of making a mistake that he will regret for the rest of his natural life. As you will see, Peter is overcome by jealousy, rage and restlessness. He lets these wild emotions take hold of him and guide him towards an inevitable miscalculation that might just cost him his life. The year is 1943.

Chapter 1:

A life-ending drought made its way through the west like an unstoppable freight train loaded to the brim. “The harvest will be piss-poor at best this year” thought Peter as he quickly and violently wiped the sweat from his brow, tore his granddad’s lucky hat from his head, and cranked the engine of his brand new Fordson model N. “How the hell am I supposed to pay this damn thing off?” he said aloud as if someone were around to hear him. “I’ve already taken out three mortgages on this forsaken plot and the bank ain’t gonna give me no more.” Peter’s wife, Martha, had left for the market only moments earlier, although Peter suspected she would be making a pit stop in town to have a visit with her newly found friend, Patrick. Lately, all you could hear coming out of Martha’s mouth was Patrick this and Patrick that. In fact, just before she left for the market on this very day, Peter recalled his wife saying “You know, honeydew, if you’d have gone to college, like Pat, maybe we wouldn’t have to worry about this farm, and these mortgages, and…” “Aw just shut the hell up, woman!” Peter remembered cutting her off and shooting her an indignant, disgruntled looking glare that seemed to come straight from the depths of hell. “I don’t wanna hear another damn word about college, or this damn Patrick character, or any of it!” “I’m frustrated enough as it is without having to hear what we shoulda, coulda, and woulda done if we’d uh had the privileges the young folk of today do!” “We’re here now ain’t we?” “Ain’t a damn thing we can do about it!” he remembered screaming just as his wife turned her back to him and opened the creaky, nearly unhinged door of the rusty old ‘35 Chevy panel truck Peter had bought at auction back in ‘41. She didn’t even say I love you. She just started the Chevy up and sped off, obviously flustered by her husbands offensive, interrupting and excessive outburst. Peter recalled a cloud of dust enveloping him as he chased after the Chevy screaming “Damn it all, woman!” “You better be back here before supper time or so help me god I’m gonna…” and she was gone.

Peter put his granddad’s lucky hat back on top of his balding head and continued to crank the model N. Not even a putter of fumes would be coming out of the exhaust pipe on this day. “Now what in the hell is wrong with this thing?” Peter muttered to himself as his blood pressure steadily rose higher and higher. His heart was just about on the brink of implosion by the time he unscrewed the gas cap of the model N only to discover that she was bone dry; not even a drop to get her warmed up while he went to town for fuel. “Son of a bitch!” Peter exclaimed as he came to the realization that his wife had just taken the only automobile they had to go off gallivanting, and most likely copulating, with some youthful, care-free son bitch that didn’t know a damn thing about how the real world functioned. “Damn it all!” he screamed. “Why have you forsaken me?” he said as he stared into the clouds, reached his open hands to the sky and fell to his knees. “That woman better be back here mighty quick” he thought to himself as his arms dropped to his sides, his chin fell to his chest and he collapsed face first into the arid, lifeless desert floor. The blazing August sun beat down on his back and made him thirst like he’d never before thirsted in his life. “I need a beer” Peter said to himself as he spit out the several granules of sand that had found their way under his lips. “Hell, maybe three or four.” “I got time.” he said and scoffed as he nodded his head left and right in complete disbelief of the situation his wife had put him in. “I gotta be dreamin” he said as he gradually rose to his feet, haphazardly slapped at his clothes in a misguided effort to dust himself off, and staggered to the back door of his dilapidated and neglected one-bedroom home.

When he finally made it to the door, he stood in silence staring at the mat below his feet. His wife had had a friend make it for her and she gav
gave it to him as a gift on their fifth anniversary. It said “Welcome Home, Honeydew” in green and yellow lettering. As he stood there, nearly dying of thirst, he remembered the first time his wife had ever called him by that affectionate nickname. It was two weeks after they’d gotten married in 1932. The depression had just about reached it’s pinnacle and most folks around the country were struggling to survive. Luckily, Peter had inherited a few thousand dollars from his recently deceased parents and was able to put a down payment on the 120 acre farm that would carry him and his wife through the economic downturn the country was experiencing at the time.
Peter had calculated that even with two or three children, Martha and he would be able to withstand the economic drought that plagued the nation. Months before they were married, Peter and Martha had spoken of having children. It was Martha’s greatest desire. She had always dreamed of filling their home with the warmth, love and total happiness that her and Peter had the privilege of experiencing as children. Martha had come from a family of seven children and she had many fond memories of her childhood. She remembered every night at supper time, her mother’s powerful voice would ring out over the land, “Supper time!,” the dinner bell would clang and all the children, including herself, would subsequently rush through the fields, up the stairs on the back porch, through the squeaky screen door and find their spot at the massive, oak table that her father had whittled himself one winter when she was five.
She remembered being stirred out of her slumber in the middle of the night by the pitter-patter of her younger sister Dorothy’s footsteps as she rushed to the washroom, striving to avoid another accident and wet sheets. She remembered when her father taught her to swim at Lawson’s pond and her older brother, Sam, just teased the hell out of her until their father laid a good lickin’ down on his bare back. All Martha desired was to provide the same encouraging and sentimental memories for her own children at some point down the line. But soon after Peter and Martha were married, a discouraging and completely unexpected discovery almost tore their relationship apart. It seemed that it just wasn’t God’s will for Martha and Peter to have a family together.
Okay that’s it had to add the extra in the details. Thank you two so far!

mexico wholesale mortgage

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Posted by Admin on June 12th, 2009 :: Filed under Books & Authors
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