
22 December 2016 | 10 replies
Just removing them will create "craters" in the middle of tile and look unsightly as they had been anchored to the floor.In the lease it states fixtures are supposed to remain in the unit after the lease

23 October 2015 | 22 replies
They'll subsequently email you a comparable match.

28 May 2018 | 4 replies
Thanks In the simplest of terms, all things being equal, assuming you aren't carrying debt against that sale of your property, you could count it as income to be used for qualifying on a subsequent purchase however, you would have to show this income on your returns and, you would have to (in most cases) show at least a two year history of it and, a two year stream of it continuing (Your note would satisfy that component).

27 May 2014 | 8 replies
We will explore all of these techniques in detail and more in subsequent postings.But no mater what technique you're going to use you want to make sure it's a win win for the both of you, however the one with the better knowledge of creative financing will ultimately come out on top.
3 January 2021 | 38 replies
Perfectly legit either way.When you get a house under contract and subsequently post pictures of said house on CL (or FB or anywhere else) you're not selling the house, you're selling the rights to the contract.You don't need a license to do that.

22 March 2021 | 12 replies
But Doug is absolutely spot on that Ogden has experienced 4-5 decades of exuberance and bust and subsequent cynicism.

4 April 2016 | 8 replies
I have come to the conclusion 30 years later that the PG is well intended and it shows some character that the borrower is willing to sign one. .But its pretty much useless in practice.If the deal has gone so far south that you have to sue him on the PG.. your in a world of hurt.. most guys are then cratering totally and you will spend far to much in attorney's fee's trying to get the judgment and then even more trying to collect.. the borrower will start putting assets in every relatives name hide accounts etc.

28 September 2018 | 20 replies
With subsequent funds that are nearly identical, you might consider less expensive options once you have the experience.Yes, the 35 non-accredited investors need to be "sophisticated" but your investors can self identify for a 506(b).

21 May 2020 | 23 replies
Fact is as much as people want prices to crater, they also want a piece of the SF RE and life action!!

23 July 2021 | 16 replies
That's pretty straight forward.Here are the scenarios that trip the brokers and lenders above and subsequently frustrate borrowers.Properties don't show up on credit; so what, they'll be on your taxes and conventional financing requires you to show your taxes and when you do, the underwriter will tie the financed properties to their mortgages and consider them financed.They're in an LLC; so what, the LLC is a pass through entity that attaches to you personally and the lender, when you signed your closing docs, required you to personally guarantee the loan.