From noss1233 at gmail.com Wed Aug 22 07:41:34 2007 From: noss1233 at gmail.com (Tommy Lee) Date: Wed Aug 22 07:42:25 2007 Subject: [Fishpathogens-develop] NUMBER ONE Success System Message-ID: http://www.noss123.com/ Prices are often much cheaper than most areas of the U.S., but in many locations prices of houses and lots are as expensive as the US, one example being Mexico City. U.S. banks have begun to give home loans for properties in Mexico, but, so far, not for other Central American countries. One important difference from the United States is that each country has rules regarding where foreigners can buy. For example, in Mexico, they cannot buy land or homes within 50km of the coast or 100km from a border, while, in Honduras, they may buy beach front property. There are also different special rules regarding certain types of property: *ejidos* - communally held farm property - cannot be sold to anyone, but that does not prevent them from being offered for sale. Many websites advertising and selling Mexican and Central American real estate exist, but they may need to be researched.To make matters more confusing these rates are often combined: For example, 4.5% 2 year fixed then a 3 year tracker at BoE rate plus 0.89%. With each incentive the lender may be offering a rate at less than the market cost of the borrowing. Therefore, they typically impose a penalty if the borrower repays the loan; this used to be called a *redemption penalty*or *tie-in*, however since the onset of Financial Services Authority regulation they are referred to as an *early repayment charge*. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://bioinformatics.org/pipermail/fishpathogens-develop/attachments/20070822/ec864937/attachment.html