Eddie Godshalk bought his first investment houses in 1987, where he was a licensed agent in the Eastern U.S. From those humble beginnings, Eddie has gained more than 20 years of real estate investment, business development and mortgage experience. Recently, Eddie gained praise for his ability to help average investors generate exceptional wealth using his revolutionary Home Value Predictor web-based real estate system. Eddie received his MBA from San Francisco State University (SFSU) with a focus on building automated valuation models (AVM’s) and real estate finance. Using the Home Value Predictor technology, Eddie has purchased numerous properties with little money down, netting greater than two thousand percent return on equity investment per property. After collecting more than four years’ worth of micro block data, Eddie and a team of SFSU and Berkeley PhD’s tested and back-tested algorithms. After testing more than eight mapping software applications, from Open Source to ESRI, the latest public version of Home Value Predictor will launch in mid 2009. Eddie is committed to bringing the most accurate, reliable and relevant information to the real estate market Home Value Predictor is poised to redefine the way we think of real estate in the 21st century.
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False Assumption 4: Appraisals and MLS information is adequate to assess local risk and make a buying decision. Home buyers and investors often make their home purchase and property investment decisions based solely on appraisals and MLS-based information about housing prices. They assume that those sources provide accurate and reliable information that reflects the true market value of the properties they intend to buy, and all relevant current local information. However, this assumption is
False Assumption 2: Existing Systems for Risk Management, such as FICO Scores and Rating Agencies, Are Adequate. To a large extent, the current housing market downturn is the consequence of exceptionally lax lending standards that amidst ample liquidity resulted in the creation of a housing bubble. The bubble burst once the unsustainable and artificially-inflated prices eroded affordability and the economic slowdown caused many borrowers with weak credit quality to default on their mortgage.

