
27 June 2009 | 25 replies
When the lender finds out they could choose to trigger the "Due on Sale" Clause which means you'd have to payoff the loan.You could look into doing a Land Trust.

24 October 2008 | 36 replies
If the numbers don't support pulling the trigger on a deal, walk away from it.As improbable as it might seem at the moment, there will be other deals.Wait for a deal worth taking so that when you slip it into your portfolio, it gets a little fatter.

12 September 2008 | 4 replies
Since the deed isnt passed until all the payments have been made, technically, you havent sold the property so the due on sale isnt triggered.

23 September 2008 | 1 reply
Can this trigger a higher tax assessed value?

2 November 2008 | 5 replies
I've been investing in RE for well over a year now, and have had 2 properties that I've been relatively succuessful, a SFD property bought as a REO , repaired cheaply and increased equity by 40% and a 6 unit apartment...

7 March 2009 | 25 replies
A BK relieves you of the obligation to pay, however that in itself doesnt trigger a foreclosure.

10 October 2008 | 9 replies
Some of the large builders have recieved fines.I'm considering trigger leads and a auto-dialer.

6 May 2011 | 40 replies
After contemplating if I shoudl post a response in this thread, here is the trigger pulled.

7 November 2008 | 1 reply
This is an attempt to avoid triggering the due on sale clause (which is found in most conventional mortgages)."

1 June 2005 | 1 reply
Remember, 99% of those wannabes will NEVER pull the trigger on a deal and will be gone in a year or so.BTW, when I lived in a major metro area (Houston) I wouldn't buy anything more than 10 miles from my house.