
31 May 2012 | 47 replies
Originally posted by Steve L.

31 May 2012 | 17 replies
If she is in the last 10/15 years the wrap financing can make up for something, like servicing or management if that were necessary.As Steve pointed out she gets very little from a short sale, funds to move out I believe, zip, and you'd need a buyer, not a L/O.

27 May 2012 | 28 replies
I agree with Steve L. - management scales very easily.

24 May 2012 | 6 replies
I have a cash only, quick close deal for sale now that I'll be happy to rehab and retai,l or rent if it doesn't sell now.

28 May 2012 | 21 replies
., J Scott, Steve L. and others have all written very persuasively about this.* You are already a two-year landlord, which is great, so your net rental income will be allowed to count when applying for bank loans.

7 June 2012 | 17 replies
I'm with J Scott- the 2 are not synonymous) really comes in handy.So to answer your question, Burt L., no "program" is really going to help you with the fundamentals of dealing with people.

8 June 2012 | 17 replies
I would try with your current insurer (unless it's Safeco).Allstate is quite popular, but are limited to insuring 4 properties - http://www.allstateagencies.com/DeanBarnard/WelcomeAmerican Family Insurance seems pretty flexible and will insure over 100 properties - http://insurance-agency.amfam.com/GA/robin-l-mitchell/Can your property manager recommend someone?

12 July 2012 | 10 replies
Originally posted by Lori L.

15 July 2012 | 4 replies
In a L/O, the seller retains the tax deductions until it's sold.

12 July 2012 | 4 replies
It should be in Section L. (700)