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14 January 2017 | 52 replies
In most cases, it is subject to interpretation (and wildly divergent state and local laws).
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1 October 2016 | 1 reply
How do you interpret the financial analysis to make a smart decision?
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28 September 2016 | 43 replies
My interpretation of people in suites or "dressed well" is fairly grass roots much like many tenants.
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31 August 2016 | 4 replies
@Eric TomlinThe strategies outlined above are an interpretation that is largely accepted within the tax planning community.
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10 November 2015 | 2 replies
The "Other Provisions" of the plan says " Debtor shall commence their monthly rent beginning 12/1/2015" which I interpret as full rent will be paid going forward.The Bankruptcy form is a little confusing, in the standard explanations section it says "To be paid, you must file a Proof of Claim even if your claim is listed in the schedules filed by the debtor."
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5 August 2015 | 1 reply
Maybe (4), but I'm not a lawyer, so I'm not sure how to interpret some of the terms and definitions.
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3 August 2021 | 103 replies
It closely reflects a thought I had when I first connected with my current group about how they could not just make extravagant statements but actually "walk the talk".To the OP's point however, let me re-interpret the "myth" for you:Yes, it takes money to do just about anything.The point is that it doesn't necessarily have to be YOUR money.As long you have some other value to bring to the table, thru networking and relationship building you'll be able to gather folks around you who have an abundance of money but a dearth of what you have to bring to the deal, whether that be time, effort, knowledge, or some other item(s) of value.
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23 October 2015 | 7 replies
Am I interpreting this correctly?
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15 November 2017 | 14 replies
I’m not a lender, just interpreting the guideline as I read it.
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19 February 2020 | 10 replies
But I interpreted you statement to be something like "industrial grade" which you don't need.E.