
29 August 2024 | 20 replies
Not concerned at all.

3 September 2024 | 0 replies
I believe the risk of taking away less in our current market to be a concern.

5 September 2024 | 11 replies
Issue the loan to the borrower's entity (LLC).Either be available to receive a call or return the call as swiftly as possible when the borrower comes calling.Allow the borrower to have multiple open loans simultaneously (if all parties are comfortable with it) to help the borrower grow their business.Have loan products that help the borrower to expand their investing options in relation to ground-up construction and/or multifamily.Have staff that are knowledgeable to investing that can assist and understand the borrower's concerns or requests.Just a few that come to mind.

2 September 2024 | 18 replies
I'm sure there's some anonimity on assets and he owns more than I know about, but he's never raised a concern with someone knowing about his projects.

2 September 2024 | 7 replies
The transition into and out of LLC was my biggest concern because it might be viewed as a short holding period, but it seems to be fine.

2 September 2024 | 31 replies
Its all mobile through phone, you'd need to be on the host account to view anything, or in the car with them to learn anything.

1 September 2024 | 1 reply
He may have taken a plea or plead guilty to a lesser charge or even been found guilty with no jail time, but with the stipulation he be registered as a sex offender.Your main concern should be what he was charged with.

1 September 2024 | 2 replies
My concern is that under the new NAR rules the agreement to hire a buyer's agent obligates the buyer to pay the buyer's agents's commission if the seller refuses to do so, and since the buyer's agent's agreement must be signed before the buyer can view a property or make an offer, the buyer has no guarantee that the seller will agree to pay that commission.

2 September 2024 | 32 replies
Beyond these projects, there’s extensive mixed-use and large-scale development happening all across the metro area, both in urban and suburban zones.Given Kansas City's comparatively low market prices (compared to the national average), there's little concern about substantial price softening.