
4 February 2016 | 8 replies
He explains it is the portion I (buyer) must pay at closing to him (Buyer RE agent) and it is stipulated up front in the Agent MLS sheet that only the RE agents can see, this is, he is NOT allowed to show it to me which doesn't make sense to me as things must be transparent.

11 February 2016 | 19 replies
They have been nothing but honest, transparent and proactive in helping their customers get the best results for their site (weekly mastermind calls with customers).

7 February 2016 | 5 replies
"Risk taking generates growth by moving resources to enterprises which create future jobs and consumption opportunities.Without stable and transparent economic roles that allow and encourage a reasonable return for risk taking, growth will not occur, as even wrong entrepreneurs will refuse to take risk.Low interest rates do not encourage creative risk taking, but create just more highly leveraged investments in low risk instruments.

8 February 2016 | 10 replies
I'd rather be transparent...but that might scare of buyers from calling in the first place...I guess that's why you say it all depends and to try them both and see what works.

11 February 2016 | 18 replies
Whether it's a bank, private lender or hard money lender, they should be completely transparent on the fee / loan structure.

12 February 2016 | 9 replies
I love the transparency.

19 February 2016 | 6 replies
The concept here is "divide and conquer"; separation makes thing transparent (aka visible) and the deposit/withdrawals/checks become a simple audit trail.

15 May 2016 | 3 replies
So, if your documentation is in order, you are transparent and are playing within the rules, they should all be "investor friendly."

18 August 2016 | 3 replies
We want to be as transparent as possible about our fees and our service.Our flat monthly rate of $80 is catching on in the industry.

24 May 2016 | 14 replies
It is also a safe and transparent market which is one of the main attractions to foreign investors.Nice to meet you on the forum.