
29 November 2018 | 14 replies
If you have a house be careful renting to 3 or 4 junior (E-5 and below) personnel, if there like me when I was young your house will soon become a mini Frat house.

10 July 2017 | 3 replies
I would think adding five separate notes with increasingly junior liens is a bad deal for lenders 3+, but am I wrong?

16 July 2017 | 10 replies
Starting out as a commercial broker most firms take half.So for instance if the commissions to the listing side is 50,000 on a deal then half goes to the brokerage.Now starting out you are likely a grunt on a team as a junior agent.So the 25,000 left the senior agent gets the lions share say 12,000, the agent 8,000, the junior agent 5,000.As a principal broker that owns my company I get it all.This happened on a recent deal I made about 80,000 on.

3 August 2017 | 7 replies
The senior broker might get 15,000, the broker 9,000, and the junior agent 6,000 as an example.

12 October 2017 | 18 replies
Make sure there's no junior liens on the property and check the amount of back taxes.As far as % goes, depends on your negotiation skills but if the UPB was 30k and it's not habitable, you should get it cheap.
22 July 2017 | 199 replies
I pay more in taxes than he makes gross in a year...Turns out I was right, he was making $15 an hour at 23, one year out of college as a junior tester.

25 August 2017 | 18 replies
I'm 20 years old, and about to start my junior year of college.

16 September 2017 | 4 replies
Newbie misconception.If the first (or a senior position) forecloses, the junior's right of redemption kicks in which says you can protect the interests granted by the security instrument and redeem (pay in full) the amount due to the first or senior lien holder.

12 August 2017 | 3 replies
Ive identified a friend from Junior High/ High School who runs his own construction company in town, and has plenty of experience to complete this project.

30 August 2017 | 5 replies
Academy cadets can usually access it in their junior year.