
25 October 2006 | 2 replies
Seeking Private investor money for bank foreclosures Northern Chicago Land area.We work with 5 banks in Lake County IL area that provide foreclosure / REO deals.Seeking Private Money - Minimum amount: $250,000Rate of return: 12- 16%Funds used to buy homes at 60 - 70% ARVAverage price per home: $150,000 - $300,000 maxAverage repair time: <2 weeksAverage repair cost: $10,000 - $20,000 maxAverage days on market: 2 - 4 weeks.Agreesive marketing plan to retail homes @ 90% LTV with 5% down from buyer.

27 October 2006 | 1 reply
My brother and I are thinking bout getting involved in RE in Lake county.

8 November 2006 | 13 replies
prp=mls&AgentId=DCGREEN&EmailKey=15469721Scroll down to MLS#3648875 (Lake Conroe), and take a look at that property.Then find the same MLS# on the report (Lake Conroe), in the link below, that I compile a couple of times a month and notice the original sale price of over 800gs compared to it's current price of $539,000http://www.houstonhotdeals.com/privatenotes.htm

13 August 2010 | 104 replies
Right in the middle of the chain of Highland Lakes, which run along the lower Colorado River from Austin to about 40 miles NW of us. all cash

6 March 2018 | 1 reply
I’m a builder in the canyon lake area, new Braunfels, and send Marcus.

30 December 2006 | 5 replies
I live in salt lake and and work in the investment business..

23 April 2007 | 11 replies
But again, it depends on where you are...Union (NC) county is growing super fast and now Gastonia is supposed to be one of the new hot spots...Oh, and Lake Wylie is slowly turning into Lake Norman...which has boomed in the last 5 years like crazy.

28 June 2007 | 2 replies
Just give me Info on what part of south GA (town, city and county) the price of an acre and some of the good stuff (lake,river disney land) in the area that will catch the eye.
27 March 2007 | 13 replies
Hell, I've been an independant consultant for 30 years.My point in criticising the MLM "foreclosure help factories' is that in my professional experience (investigating allegations of predatory practices for the Mortgage Bankers Association, Washington DC, and serving as Plaintiff's expert on mortgage loan servicing in several Federal Bankruptcy Courts, plus running my own NonProfit preforeclosure counseling org for a decade) is that the offer to "help" evaporates the instant the so-called services provider realizes there isn't a buck to be made.... leaving the distressed homeowner in worse straights.If you are an exception to the generalization, that's great as you are one less businessman in need of oversight.