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12 January 2015 | 15 replies
@JOAN DICKIE the difference is that a wholesaler adds to a sale price keeping that as compensation, that is basically a net listing situation for an agent and it is derived from the equity the owner had but didn't collect, an agent is paid from the highest price they may obtain for the owner who then pays a commission from the price attained.
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13 June 2016 | 5 replies
The only way RLD will not negatively come into play for the actual investor ROI achieved is if the investor leaves their money in the fund until no defaulted loans exist or if no loans default for the time they have investment in the fund, which are not a realistic assumptions for deriving actual investor ROI.
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1 July 2016 | 13 replies
We don't know what you and the American CPA actually discussed, but I am guessing that the message was that your expected level of activity within the s-corp would be too low to derive any benefit from the ability to shelter income from self-employment income taxes and that doing business in your own name would be just as effective and less expensive.
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23 October 2015 | 3 replies
There are many many reasons for this; foreclosure backlog, title issues, securitized derivatives, poor communication within bank and servicers, etc.
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20 October 2015 | 40 replies
I find that this is just not the case.. the value is the value you pay not some phantom value that is derived by comps or even an appraisal.. if the true market value and the true open market would allow the builder to sell for 10 to 20% higher then that's what they would do .
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31 October 2015 | 3 replies
My question derives from the fact that I was under the impression that once we have an application we can not release that information.
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30 September 2016 | 50 replies
The difference, unfortunately, between right and wrong is now a culturally derived and global influenced concept.
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17 November 2015 | 7 replies
Hello @Miguel GaleanoWelcome on BiggerPocket.The main reason to set up a company is to limit your liability deriving from owning a house and having tenants in your property.
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19 November 2015 | 13 replies
In addition, I don't know how you derived at $60 cash flow, but if your house has more upgrades and or desirable features, you can demand more rent.
18 November 2015 | 7 replies
If you deem the actuals to be overstated or understated, then you can make corrective assumptions based on your gut and other derived market data you come up with.