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27 June 2016 | 7 replies
I said, “Exactly.”They asked, “When can we do it.”Notice I didn’t say words like note, security deed, warrant deed, owner finance, interest rate, or term.
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28 June 2016 | 13 replies
Aside from that only items that would be your labour/no cost.The rent price point does not warrant any other upgrades.If your intention is to sell the work should be entirely different.
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28 June 2016 | 8 replies
You need to find a portfolio lender who does "non warrantable condo loans".
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25 July 2016 | 9 replies
Depending on the mortgage servicer and their process will determine if a buyer change can be done quickly or if it's going to warrant a full new review.
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29 June 2016 | 5 replies
Look for a company who warrants the work as well!
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1 February 2019 | 3 replies
I see that most condos are non-warrantable (more than 51% rentals) and hence Frannie Mae or Freddie Mac will not buy them.
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11 July 2016 | 23 replies
There's a lot of assumptions here, but the moral of the story is that the potential tax liability probably warrants the advice of a trusted tax professional.
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15 July 2016 | 5 replies
Sounds like you'd be looking at a "non-warrantable" mortgage.
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1 February 2020 | 9 replies
This subsection does not apply to a lien or encumbrance placed on the property that is:(1) placed on the property because of the conduct of the purchaser;(2) agreed to by the purchaser as a condition of a loan obtained to place improvements on the property, including utility or fire protection improvements; or(3) placed on the property by the seller prior to the execution of the contract in exchange for a loan used only to purchase the property if:(A) the seller, not later than the third day before the date the contract is executed, notifies the purchaser in a separate written disclosure:(i) of the name, address, and phone number of the lienholder or, if applicable, servicer of the loan;(ii) of the loan number and outstanding balance of the loan;(iii) of the monthly payments due on the loan and the due date of those payments; and(iv) in 14-point type that, if the seller fails to make timely payments to the lienholder, the lienholder may attempt to collect the debt by foreclosing on the lien and selling the property at a foreclosure sale;(B) the lien:(i) is attached only to the property sold to the purchaser under the contract; and(ii) secures indebtedness that, at no time, is or will be greater in amount than the amount of the total outstanding balance owed by the purchaser under the executory contract;(C) the lienholder:(i) does not prohibit the property from being encumbered by an executory contract; and(ii) consents to verify the status of the loan on request of the purchaser and to accept payments directly from the purchaser if the seller defaults on the loan; and(D) the following covenants are placed in the executory contract:(i) a covenant that obligates the seller to make timely payments on the loan and to give monthly statements to the purchaser reflecting the amount paid to the lienholder, the date the lienholder receives the payment, and the information described by Paragraph (A);(ii) a covenant that obligates the seller, not later than the third day the seller receives or has actual knowledge of a document or an event described by this subparagraph, to notify the purchaser in writing in 14-point type that the seller has been sent a notice of default, notice of acceleration, or notice of foreclosure or has been sued in connection with a lien on the property and to attach a copy of all related documents received to the written notice; and(iii) a covenant that warrants that if the seller does not make timely payments on the loan or any other indebtedness secured by the property, the purchaser may, without notice, cure any deficiency with a lienholder directly and deduct from the total outstanding balance owed by the purchaser under the executory contract, without the necessity of judicial action, 150 percent of any amount paid to the lienholder.
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12 July 2016 | 0 replies
looking for advice:I bought an $85k, non-warrantable condo as a cash purchase (using my heloc from my primary).