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21 October 2011 | 8 replies
Both of these can be somewhat mitigated by selling closer to the owed amount.Therefore, it's in the seller's best interest to get as high an offer as possible, and if an agent refuses to present that offer, the agent is not only breaking real estate regulations but is also not fulfilling his/her fiduciary duty to the seller.
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26 October 2011 | 7 replies
The answer is always the same (or should be) and that is, YES, BUT IF you buy right, know your market, and have a plan and means to execute it.The "R" word is a common word that comes up, the truth is, risk can be mitigated with the right strategy for the area and the right price for the investment.What do you want to do?
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25 November 2011 | 27 replies
Make a web sight, some business cards, that makes it reputable. 3) Form your investment property as an LLC, because you can choose your taxation, and move it to an S-corp very easily if you later choose to, but you will have a hell of a time changing a S-corp into anything else. 4) Lend the funds from XYZ lending too XYZ properties, this mitigates all losses, creates returns, etc..
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11 November 2011 | 6 replies
FEMA mitigation set the rates.
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13 November 2011 | 3 replies
I'm just wondering if he had to go through some form of Loss Mitigation , but on a larger scale.
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14 November 2011 | 8 replies
In each case a simple consistent policy helped mitigate or eliminate a legal proceeding.
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17 November 2011 | 9 replies
You should definitely outsource the negotiating (not only to reduce the time, but because they should know how to work the loss mitigation dept for a better discount).Also, always try for an anti-deficiency letter for the seller.Personally, I would find an expert who does SS & farm the lead to them for a cut.Jay von Mohr
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26 November 2011 | 50 replies
In other words, there is risk and it is our job to inform the buyer and try to mitigate as much of that risk as possible.2.
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20 November 2011 | 12 replies
For Florida landlords, make sure your insurance agent is aware of "wind mitigation" coverage.
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15 January 2018 | 26 replies
I ran into the same issue with Navy Fed when I was looking for financing for our first property and that's 100% a choice by the lending institution, presumably to mitigate risk.