
3 August 2014 | 6 replies
hi all,i am new to this space, but am a huge fan of boards (i am a member of several others,but none re related) and the experiences members share on them. albeit, i am newer to re investing, i feel i have navigated moderately well . since no one in my family or friends have been involved in re in the level like have, i have had limited critiques on how i operate and how i should proceed. so, here i plan to lay it all out-as a first time poster, first time real estate board member:-)a little about my background: my full time job is working for a big four firm. i was a treasury banker, but moved to the sweeter gig i am in now. my goal is to own outright 3 money making properties and my primary. afterwards, i want to teach school.in 2006 i bought my first house in Charleston, sc, (which i will refer to as house 1). a few months later, i was relocated to charlotte, where i purchased another house a year later (house 2). neither house cost more than 110k, but still, after 2008, i was upside-down on both, by 20%. i purchased home 1 as a primary, but had my brother move in when i was relocated. i kept a room in home 1 and continued to call it a primary when i purchased home 2. now home 2 is right outside charlotte, and in a rougher neighborhood. after living there 3 years, i decided to rent it out and go back to Charleston. i have had some great renters there and have been ecstatic about the setup, outside the fact it is 3.5 hours away. my rents pay PI and PMI, but only half the TI. my fiancé and i relocated back to Charleston and rented a few months, when in the depths of the recession, a little condo came on the market close to downtown and folly beach. i wiped out my cash savings and purchased it cash for 50k. we loved the location so much, we moved in and have yet to leave, even though my original intent was for it to be a rental. currently, we consider it our 2nd home (pls do not mistake for home 2) as home 1 is occupied still by my bro, even though i have a room still in it.now we come to today. my fiancé has been starting to talk about the future and kids and wants a house with a yard... yada, yada, yada. okay, i admit i am feeling it too, but i am in kind of a pickle: house 1 is not "rented" (although my bro kicks in 75% of the mortgage) , the house 2 is rented and I'm very comfortable with it, and the condo (let's call it house 3) is not rented. now is the problem: how to get financing. house 1 and 2 are ltv at 90%, but the condo is at zero ltv. i plan to rent the condo out once i have a plan in place. right now, i have cash to put 25% down, and we are looking in the 110k-160k. my job is pretty solid, and my work prospects are even better for the next several years. my credit is an "a"the main question i have is (1) try to go normal financing route or should i try private lenders?

4 June 2014 | 131 replies
Two areas I see, economic laws, passed to manipulate economic aspects for the benefit of some and public law that focuses on how things are conducted to safeguard the public from various afflictions.

12 May 2014 | 13 replies
Contractor estimates can always be manipulated and everyone on all sides knows this.
13 May 2014 | 14 replies
That said the elite seem to know how to manipulate things but again the more corruption that is exposed the better the world will be as a whole in my opinion.

13 May 2014 | 10 replies
@michaelkevorkian thank you for taking the time to respond in depth, that makes a lot of sense and helps greatly.

11 August 2015 | 53 replies
I have been analyzing this in depth lately because I am thinking about picking up some rental properties.

26 January 2018 | 79 replies
I'll address predatory lending and dealing in another thread as it is an underlying issue here, but is much broader and in depth than this matter.I know some don't understand what predatory is, it's basically taking an excessive unfair advantage, that excess is set to norms or as to the average transaction like the subject transaction.

23 May 2014 | 8 replies
I know my boss was called down town to meet with the Building Dept. He

22 June 2014 | 11 replies
If the public actually knew how it all worked, it would not do much good for creditors since the public would manipulate it.

24 May 2014 | 6 replies
Wordpress has pretty much everything you'll need.I find it easy to manipulate the code and install the various plugins.