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19 November 2017 | 13 replies
. Joint or total ownership of a property that is held in the name of a corporation or S-corporation, even if the borrower is the owner of the corporation; however, the financing is in the name of the borrower. Obligation on a mortgage debt for a residential property (regardless of whether or not the borrower is an owner of the property). Ownership of property that is held in the name of a limited liability company (LLC) or partnership where the borrower(s) have an individual or combined ownership in the LLC or partnership of 25% or more, regardless of the entity (or borrower) that is the obligor on the mortgage. Ownership of a property that is held in the name of an LLC or partnership where the borrower(s) have an individual or combinedownership in the LLC or partnership of less than 25% and the financing is in the name of the borrower. Ownership of a manufactured home and the land on which it is situated that is titled as real propertyType of Property Ownership NOT to include in Financed Property Count: Ownership of commercial real estate. Ownership of a multifamily property consisting of more than four dwelling units. Joint or total ownership of a property that is held in the name of a corporation or S-corporation, even if the borrower is the owner of the corporation and the financing is in the name of the corporation or S-corporation. Ownership in a timeshare. Ownership of a vacant (residential) lot. Ownership of a property that is held in the name of an LLC or partnership where the borrower(s) have an individual or combined ownership in the LLC or partnership of less than 25% and the financing is in the name of the LLC or partnership. Ownership of a manufactured home on a leasehold estate not titled as real property (chattel lien on the home).
22 November 2017 | 17 replies
Otherwise, you can try calling their corporate switchboard and asking for a REO department.
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5 December 2017 | 8 replies
Hi there BP,A RE newbie here, but dying to leave my computer-staring corporate job for that cash-flow-propelled passive income life of travel and freedom we're all dreaming of.
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24 November 2017 | 6 replies
@Steve RomanoNote that if you create a Pennsylvania LLC, you can ask the IRS to tax it as a partnership/sole-proprietor, S-Corp, or a C-Corp.
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29 November 2017 | 10 replies
I absolutely have full-time plans as an agent but am not yet ready to take off the golden handcuffs from the corporate job.
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1 December 2017 | 12 replies
Under some circumstances, a corporation may be appropriate.
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26 November 2017 | 3 replies
You do not need to send a 1099 to most corporations.
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30 November 2017 | 11 replies
You might have to use conventional financing (20% down) and organize yourselves into an LLC or S Corp or something similar which will add cost.
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28 November 2017 | 1 reply
Has anyone dealt with Nevada corporate Headquarters Inc?