
2 November 2011 | 5 replies
Remember, 10% of a property worth $1M is worth a lot more to you than 100% of a property worth nothing.Continue looking for funding sources... take out a loan against your car, 401k, life insurance, etc.Your post is sorely lacking in details and those details are all going to be needed before anyone will take you too seriously.

4 May 2012 | 8 replies
This used to be a trailer court till it died of old age and didnt meet new water regs and septic issues.It is ADJOINING the city's water treatment plant.

10 January 2011 | 8 replies
I may be mistaken, but I thought that the HomePath stuff was geared toward owner occupants getting the favored treatment.
3 July 2011 | 10 replies
Ph up, ph down, algecides, chlorinaters, shock treatments, clarifiers, stabilizers, etc.

27 July 2011 | 21 replies
Again, though, I'm not sure its a simple average.Of course there are MANY factors - size, beds, baths, style, garage, parking, alleyway, busy street, next to a sewer treatment plant, etc.

29 August 2015 | 2 replies
The main point here I suppose is the tax treatment that you have from the fund is from the fund not from the vehicle that invested in it.

20 May 2016 | 86 replies
(a new development, unannounced insider-info plans for a company move, etc)Or in his case the sewage treatment plant in going in the NBHD and he is not willing to pay market rate because he sees this having a negative impact on values.

15 March 2016 | 3 replies
If not, please let me know where I should ask the following:I've come across some real eye sores of buildings during my travels around the Unites States.

3 May 2014 | 18 replies
The Bay Area core just doesn't have the stomach to go high density, so RE price has no way to go but up.5% annual appreciation for the next 20 years is very likely IMO.Interestingly enough, I wonder what will self-driving cars do to local RE.