26 September 2016 | 3 replies
Brian Jameson If you show a loss YoY on your returns, most of the traditional long term financing options will be closed to you, including Fannie/Freddie and typical bank loans.

7 October 2016 | 30 replies
Expect triple taxes in the future (which is my concern with making money in traditional IRA versus Roth) and expect perpetual low interest rates and thus perpetual asset bubble crashes.I have seen the trend and that's why I only to be investing in real estate as a hedge fund manager.

5 October 2016 | 9 replies
Traditional financing should be pretty straight forward.

28 September 2016 | 16 replies
I'm technically newly self employed so I don't qualify for traditional financing through a mortgage company.

10 February 2017 | 25 replies
What that will allow you to do is setup a US Bank account.The fact of the matter is that traditional bank finance is difficult to obtain (especially in the early stages).

28 September 2016 | 15 replies
I had a person contact me who, of course can't get a traditional mortgage but was wondering if I could help her with a particular property.

27 September 2016 | 1 reply
I'm currently stuck and do not have any way for traditional funding and my credit is to low for other methods.

27 September 2016 | 2 replies
I'm currently stuck and do not have any way for traditional funding and my credit is to low for other methods
29 September 2016 | 4 replies
We have traditional financing on both houses, so I need to contact our mortgage company as well?

27 September 2016 | 3 replies
Thank you All - it's more of a traditional deal ie. going the route of a typical investment that will cashflow just a little in our market (MA) with 25% down - for us it appears to be a good long term investment if we had the 25%.This particular one doesn't need rehab so no BRRR strategy here.I'm curious if there are any other strategies that could be used to paying back a private money / hard money lender after say 6 months with this type of scenario?