
21 July 2005 | 0 replies
I'll follow up with interested buyers and get them pre-approved, then send them back to you.If you'd like to establish a mutually beneficial professional relationship, feel free to contact me.

10 November 2005 | 4 replies
Let's take things one step at a time.Before you invest in ANYTHING, stocks, bonds, mutual funds, real estate, or fine art, you must UNDERSTAND what you are doing.

3 December 2005 | 3 replies
It's even MORE $Beneficial$ when you are a member...

12 February 2006 | 2 replies
3.Then have the seller assigned the Beneficial Interest to Joe Buyer.Then if the bank wanted to see the Agreement and Declaration of Trust it would show the seller had beneficiary interest in the trust.

5 May 2006 | 28 replies
If they return better than doing stocks, mutual funds, or your other options, it might be worth it to keep the properties around for a while.

3 January 2007 | 5 replies
Get existing lender to sign off on this (won't lenders security in any way).2- prepare a co-beneficiary agreement - owner assigns (90%) beneficial interest in the trust to you.

29 May 2006 | 4 replies
If you can put together a Short Sale Package asap and negotiate with the Mortgage Company to buy the house before the auction, it will be extremely beneficial to the homeowner - she will not have a foreclosure on her credit record and she should be able to stop the bankruptcy.

2 March 2008 | 20 replies
It is much easier to deal with a person when you met him on a meeting with mutual interests.

1 November 2006 | 18 replies
Use the money you are saving from not paying principal and put it towards investing in mutual funds, money markets, etc and then take that profit and put it towards your mortgage over time, which will allow you to pay down your PRINCIPAL FASTER.2.

12 April 2008 | 78 replies
Originally posted by "Mutual":Hello all.