
14 April 2016 | 41 replies
Unfortunately, common sense is about as uncommon among landlords, as it is everywhere else.

8 April 2016 | 2 replies
It's also not uncommon to have a variable commission agreement, where if the listing agent ends up finding the buyer and there is no other realtor (buyer's agent) involved, they get an amount somewhere in-between (i.e. higher that 3% but lower than 6% in this scenario).

24 April 2016 | 3 replies
That type of cracking is not uncommon, but we still asked for additional details.

25 February 2020 | 10 replies
Every loan is different, but in general all the investors with over 25% stake in an LLC and 10% for a corporation along with the syndicator (no matter how small the syndicator's actual share of the project is, as it is not uncommon for the stake to be 0.01%, this however does not mean that the cash flow/sale proceeds need to be distributed in that fashion), will need to undergo mortgage credit review.

26 April 2016 | 14 replies
I've rented property for almost 15 years and while one incident is not uncommon, two or more is a pattern.

25 September 2019 | 9 replies
That is very uncommon and can enable you to get twice the amount of doors for your money but depends on your risk appetite.

25 September 2019 | 2 replies
However, if the buyer uses another buyer agent who charges 1% buyer agent commission, the buyer can even make a better offer than offer B, like offer C:$970k offer price and the buyer directly pays $10k buyer agent commission to the buyer agent.Let’s make the case more real and introduce the cash offer scenario which is not uncommon for hot homes in the Greater Seattle Area.

10 April 2020 | 7 replies
Most of them have a trusted Realtor in Halifax, so it's not uncommon... half the time I'll make an offer sight-unseen also because there's no time to hesitate.

1 October 2019 | 4 replies
It’s not uncommon to have a recently remodeled house worth 200k here renting for 1400/month.

2 October 2019 | 9 replies
@Harry Williams That structure isn't uncommon in other niches of investing, mainly the PE space, and there it is called mezzanine debt.