
29 January 2014 | 4 replies
Answer that question and you'll mostly know if this exercise is worth the effort by an agent or for you to market it thru Craigslist or other media.

30 July 2021 | 40 replies
I understand awesomeness of computers, I also understand we don't have artificial intelligence yet.Some people understand statistical relevance, the rest don't.The way I see it is that those who believe they can predict future occurrences on a property based on historical data from a huge population simply enjoy the exercise.

31 January 2014 | 3 replies
But generally, in a good sampling of feedback, there is some material I can use about what, if anything, I might have done differently at a property.

12 September 2014 | 17 replies
My only point is that as a seller in Texas, it does not benefit me to sell by GWD so I don’t.While its customary for insurance companies include a subrogation clause in their policies to mitigate their financial loss on a given policy, I think it’s unwise for a me (as seller) to give the title company the option to exercise that right against me.When selling via SWD, if the title company pays a covered claim for an issue that arose prior to my ownership the title company cannot sue me to make them whole again because I didn’t warrant title for all ownership prior to mine.

9 February 2014 | 14 replies
My wife and I recently went through an expense reduction exercise.

13 May 2008 | 40 replies
I believe there is a way to search by tax map number. i wonder if that will help.flipper,i am in NJ. i have a realtor who i work with, ill ask him. but i guess what he pulls will be from MLS. will that have title info. do we have a sample on this site which shows, what the results of a title search look like?

31 March 2008 | 7 replies
When dealing with a bank owned property can you exercise an option to purchase type contract and simply assign it to someone else for a specefied fee?

7 February 2010 | 79 replies
I get exercise every morning and a discount in transportation.

2 June 2008 | 9 replies
Yet, the results of an HUD sponsored study on housing prices in 2004 revealed that (emphasis added), [S]ampled prices for single-family homes in areas of Houston that were (1) zoned, (2) governed by covenants, and (3) governed by neither zoning nor covenants . . .