Desperate home sellers turning to St. Joseph
"Hicks was chuckling to hear that the measure she recently took to help sell her house -- burying a statue of St. Joseph upside down in the front yard -- is a growing trend as sellers try to offset hopelessness invading housing markets across the nation."
If I read this article correctly, owners of homes that are so overpriced that there are no buyers are expecting St. Joseph-in-the-yard to bring in buyers.
Buyers who will pay more than market price for the topsy-turvey-StJo home?
Would it be safe to assume that the overpayers aren't catholic?
GordoM-lookin'-for-a-saint-to-zip-his-401k-performance.
"Hicks was chuckling to hear that the measure she recently took to help sell her house -- burying a statue of St. Joseph upside down in the front yard -- is a growing trend as sellers try to offset hopelessness invading housing markets across the nation."
If I read this article correctly, owners of homes that are so overpriced that there are no buyers are expecting St. Joseph-in-the-yard to bring in buyers.
Buyers who will pay more than market price for the topsy-turvey-StJo home?
Would it be safe to assume that the overpayers aren't catholic?
GordoM-lookin'-for-a-saint-to-zip-his-401k-performance.
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