Friday, 29 July 2011
Atlantic International Partnership Funding Group
http://prsync.com/atlantic-international-partnership-funding-group/AIFG has established a unique and innovative concept in the mortgage industry (Partnership Servicing) that is ideally suited to a challenging economy and real estate market. If you don’t know about our concept, then here’s an opportunity to learn more.
Atlantic International Partnership, a Florida Based, Multi State Licensed Mortgage Banker, has been providing partnership services to the mortgage and real estate industry since 2001. At AIFG we are all about partnership not product which is truly a unique approach to the mortgage industry.
Website: aifgi.com/
Atlantic International Partnership Funding Group press releases
- Shares of homebuilders slipped Tuesday after a closely watched housing index showed that home prices are falling in most major U.S. cities. By The Associated Press. From www.businessweek.com news articles. AIFG has established a unique and innovative concept in the mortgage industry (Partnership Servicing) that is ideally suited to a challenging economy and real estate market. If you don’t know about our concept, then here’s an opportunity to learn more. Analysts expect...
- New rules on loan-originator compensation may not be answer to borrowers’ woes AIFG has established a unique and innovative concept in the mortgage industry (Partnership Servicing) that is ideally suited to a challenging economy and real estate market. If you don’t know about our concept, then here’s an opportunity to learn more. By Harvey S. Jacobs New loan-originator compensation rules promulgated by the Federal Reserve Board make three sweeping...
- First-time Buyers will benefit as agency poised to offload homes By Charlie Weston Personal Finance Editor. The move by state property agency the National Asset Management Agency (NAMA) to sell off the residential properties on its books could be good news for first-time buyers, property experts said yesterday. Those who take up the deal could end up with more favourable mortgage terms. Details of how the process would work are still being put together. But it is likely that NAMA...
- While applying for mortgage refinancing, I asked the loan officer for credit score wisdom based on her experience. I knew most of the advice but I found some of her comments interesting so I’ll post the collection of advice, tips, and cautions.
- All mortgages or mortgage lenders are not created equal. There are so many factors to consider when looking for a mortgage like rate, closing costs, points, fees and what type of program best fits your need.
- Fence-Sitting Homebuyers Face FHA Fee Hike Deadline by Jann Swanson. Both applications for FHA-guaranteed mortgages and FHA endorsements were lower in January than in the previous month or in January 2010. Reduced loan demand was reflected across all subsets, purchases, refinances and mortgages for first-time buyers. Atlantic International Partnership Funding Group commits to offering a comprehensive menu of partnership service advantages and solutions in the simplest format possible; offer...
- The National Association of Realtors today released Existing Home Sales data for January 2011. Existing Home Sales report on the number of completed real estate sales transactions on single-family homes, townhomes, condominiums and co-ops. The methodology in calculating existing-home sales statistics is really quite simple. Each month the National Association of Realtor® receives data on existing-home sales from local associations/boards and multiple listing services (MLS) nationwide...
- AIFG has established a unique and innovative concept in the mortgage industry (PARTNERSHIP SERVICING) that is ideally suited to a challenging economy and real estate market. If you don’t know about our concept, then here’s an opportunity to learn more. Providing Service to the mortgage Industry since 2001, AIFG is comprised of a talented group of mortgage professionals with a unique blend of both wholesale and retail mortgage banking experience. Our platform is founded on the belief that three basic...
- AIFG commits to offering a comprehensive menu of partnership service advantages and solutions in the simplest format possible; offer the services at a competitive price and deliver the services at the highest level of excellence without exception. Providing Service to the mortgage Industry since 2001, AIFG is comprised of a talented group of mortgage professionals with a unique blend of both wholesale and retail mortgage banking experience. Our platform is founded on the belief that three basic...
- AIFG has established a unique and innovative concept in the mortgage industry (Partnership Servicing) that is ideally suited to a challenging economy and real estate market. If you don’t know about our concept, then here’s an opportunity to learn more.
Atlantic International Partnership Headlines: China as Number One? Don’t Bet Your Bottom Dollar
http://business.ezinemark.com/atlantic-international-partnership-headlines-china-as-number-one-dont-bet-your-bottom-dollar-7d2e86197276.html
Tired of Afghanistan and all those messy, oil-ish wars in the Greater Middle East that just don’t seem to pan out? Count on one thing: part of the U.S. military feels just the way you do, especially a largely sidelined Navy — and that’s undoubtedly one of the reasons why, a few months back, the specter of China as this country’s future enemy once again reared its ugly head.
Back before 9/11, China was, of course, the favored future uber-enemy of Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and all those neocons who signed onto the Project for the New American Century and later staffed George W. atlantic international partnership, atlantic international partnership madrid, economy newsBush’s administration. After all, if you wanted to build a military beyond compare to enforce a long-term Pax Americana on the planet, you needed a nightmare enemy large enough to justify all the advanced weapons systems in which you planned to invest.
As late as June 2005, neocon journalist Robert Kaplan was still writing in the Atlantic about “How We Would Fight China,” an article with this provocative subhead: “The Middle East is just a blip. The American military contest with China in the Pacific will define the twenty-first century. And China will be a more formidable adversary than Russia ever was.” As everyone knows, however, that “blip” proved far too much for the Bush administration.
Finding itself hopelessly bogged down in two ground wars with rag-tag insurgency movements on either end of the Greater Middle Eastern “mainland,” it let China-as-Monster-Enemy slip beneath the waves. In the process, the Navy and, to some extent, the Air Force became adjunct services to the Army (and the Marines). In Iraq and Afghanistan, for instance, U.S. Navy personnel far from any body of water found themselves driving trucks and staffing prisons.
It was the worst of times for the admirals, and probably not so great for the flyboys either, particularly after Secretary of Defense Robert Gates began pushing pilotless drones as the true force of the future. Naturally, a no-dogfight world in which the U.S. military eternally engages enemies without significant air forces is a problematic basis for proposing future Air Force budgets.
There’s no reason to be surprised then that, as the war in Iraq began to wind down in 2009-2010, the “Chinese naval threat” began to quietly reemerge. China was, after all, immensely economically successful and beginning to flex its muscles in local territorial waters. The alarms sounded by military types or pundits associated with them grew stronger in the early months of 2011 (as did news of weapons systems being developed to deal with future Chinese air and sea power). “Beware America, time is running out!” warned retired Air Force lieutenant general and Fox News contributor Thomas G. McInerney while describing China’s first experimental stealth jet fighter.
Others focused on China’s “string of pearls”: a potential set of military bases in the Indian Ocean that might someday (particularly if you have a vivid imagination) give that country control of the oil lanes. Meanwhile, Kaplan, whose book about rivalries in that ocean came out in 2010, was back in the saddle, warning: “Now the United States faces a new challenge and potential threat from a rising China which seeks eventually to push the U.S. military’s area of operations back to Hawaii and exercise hegemony over the world’s most rapidly growing economies.” (Head of the U.S. Pacific Command Admiral Robert Willard claimed that China had actually taken things down a notch at sea in the early months of 2011 — but only thanks to American strength.)
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