
16 February 2015 | 10 replies
I'll mention too that those motivations need to be self imposed by an owner and not influenced by misinformation a buyer may introduce.A property that is not exposed to an open market for a sufficient period of time doesn't meet the definition of market value, but is a distressed sale, if a buyer approaches and owner and they agree to a price, then that price IS the perceived value, need to consider the seller's opinion as much as the buyer's.

8 July 2014 | 55 replies
I would prefer to see no out of state investors in my area...especially coastal investors that come to the Midwest because of what they perceive to be cheap prices.

31 May 2011 | 17 replies
This is just what I have perceived while building our portfolio in Florida.We bought our first Florida home just over a year ago and have 3 more under contract.

23 May 2014 | 20 replies
I spend a lot of my time these days studying/exploring creative/new ways of doing and perceiving things.

13 June 2014 | 3 replies
These are perceived as low-security because a guy with a radio receiver could snarf the code off the air.

13 January 2015 | 12 replies
You're still the one calling the shots that affect how the clients/tenants perceive their experience with your product.

22 April 2015 | 15 replies
Watch it till the end and you will be glad you did.As far as how you are perceived on BP, I am not sure if it really matters too much.

6 July 2018 | 2 replies
That being said, things are getting pretty tense between the two considering the home is vacant, they are paying alot in taxes, upkeep, it was never really the aunts place to begin with, the aunts perceived value etc.

16 July 2018 | 31 replies
With this in mind applicants will never admit to flaws and will deny anything they believe will be perceived as negative by a landlord.

30 November 2010 | 54 replies
What is perceived therefore becomes a fact.