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Results (2,380+)
Jeff Tumbarello Credit Suisse Dressed Down Over Yellowstone Loan
30 May 2009 | 1 reply
A large part of the loan proceeds were almost immediately distributed to “personal accounts and payoffs†for Tim Blixseth, who founded Yellowstone and controlled it, and his former wife, Edra.“The only plausible explanation for Credit Suisse’s actions is that it was simply driven by the fees it was extracting from the loans it was selling, and letting the chips fall where they may,†the judge wrote.“Unfortunately for Credit Suisse,†he added, “those chips fell in this court.â€A Credit Suisse spokesman told Reuters that the company was disappointed with the ruling, disagreed with the court’s findings and was considering its options.
Mark Yuschak Bookkeeping - what's your approach?
30 May 2010 | 25 replies
i use spreadsheets...i got sick of the accounting software and all the info it wanted so I enter every receipt onto a master data file and extract what i need, when i need it.
Ryan Fatula What type of return can I expect from adding new windows??
24 January 2013 | 19 replies
Ryan it's difficult for me to extract that out of the market, even with a bunch of comps to use.
Dan Koch Angry at my agent on a short sale
2 July 2012 | 13 replies
No I don't feel you should be angry.This isn't a pocket short sale listing from what you are describing.The servicer for the loan as part of their PSA agreement probably stipulates the property to be exposed FULLY to the market to extract the most value.If you do not have a buyer brokerage agreement with this agent your a CUSTOMER and NOT a CLIENT.If you had an agreement signed with you as a client and also the seller then when doing the purchase and sale they could select dual agency if allowed in your state.They could also bring another agent in for your side or fill in the contract with you being the customer and the seller the client.There is also implied duty with the lender on a short sale as the bank is taking the loss on the loan and approving the sale or it doesn't close.It sounds like you are looking for a needle in a haystack and now you are upset competition is involved.It happens.
Ron S. 2 Bedroom SFH are they good investments?
13 October 2012 | 23 replies
And while you might be a cash buyer now, down the road you may want to extract equity to grow.
Vernon Wharff How can an investor help in a foreclosure?
25 March 2008 | 7 replies
Just like almost all of us continue to make our car payments even though the loan balance is almost guaranteed to exceed the value.I know there were also lots of homeowners who refinanced and HELOC'ed their properties over and over, extracting every bit of that inflated equity.
Jason Malabute CALCULATING ARV ADJUSTMENTS
12 December 2017 | 16 replies
The best way to find those values is either to ask a local knowledgable realtor, or to extract them by doing a comparative analysis on like properties with one that doesn't have that particular feature, and the same way that you wold do a CMA.  
Danielle D. Best Cash on Cash returns advice needed
15 February 2011 | 7 replies
OK, I'll play devil's advocate to Jon's advice on extracting equity from your personal residence.
Maryann L. How does personal credit affect LLC?
22 January 2012 | 12 replies
When you transfer title to a partnership (LLC), you might be adding additional risk if your partner has creditor's trying to extract payments on bad debts or even a judgment.Another way for you to do this is a joint venture agreement.
Jerrmarco Rhodes New Guy Needs help with multifamily analysis
22 January 2010 | 6 replies
If you apply the usual goal of extracting $100/month/unit from $300 in rent, what's left for expenses and debt service is only $200. $150 of that is expense (50% rule, which I assure you applies to these properties), leaving only $50 for debt service.