Eric Foster
-------> Challenge For You! <-------
16 June 2008 | 38 replies
:D I too want the sweatshirt but is it possible to get a Double XX Fat.
Kevin D
Q: Likelihood of Com. REI w/o good credit?? ie IRS tax liens
18 March 2008 | 7 replies
So, I thought it might be a good idea, rather than getting "fat and happy" to mitigate my risk and hunt for additional opportunities.
Glenn Espinosa
Analyze 2nd deal
25 October 2011 | 14 replies
One of my main concerns would be once the building inspector starts poking his fat snout around that I would have to get the wiring, this, that, or the other "up to code".
Ariella Cohen
Home priced 15K over county assessmnet
21 October 2011 | 4 replies
In my market, they asses a 25-35k at a value of 70-75k, in an effort to drive up the tax base to pay their nice fat pensions.
George P.
no-closing cost refinancing
24 February 2021 | 4 replies
.), they can often offer several concessions to the borrower, such as pay their closing costs, because the lender is paying the broker a fat little bonus for selling the higher rate, which makes the note much more valuable on the secondary market (yeah, selling the mortgage to somebody else for a premium) or as a portfolio loan (the lender services the loan and enjoys all that extra interest).
Kelly Burton
Employing Broker Opinions Please
3 November 2011 | 3 replies
Kelly I looked at recruiting agent for my firm years ago.At one point I did an active campaign and had about 45 agents at my firm at one time.I have found most agents feel entitled or won't follow the steps you tell them to be successful.They will skip some steps because they are lazy and want to "get rich quick" like the rest of the population which is why so many fail.If I add an agent say on a 70/30 split then I have to take time from my own deals where I make 100 percent to make 30 with them.The training and getting over their mindset takes so much more time than me doing my own deals.This is why I have only 7 agents right now.I got rid of the rest.Many companies try the 100 percent model but you get either new agents having no experience,part-time agents who are rusty,child support demands,irs tax liens,license lapses for education and or non-payment of dues etc.It is a huge headache to keep up with for a low return.If you go the other route you can train new agents for a fat split before they leave the business or train a select few agents that you want to feed leads to on your team.I just focus now on my own investment purchases and my own commercial listings.
Travis Elliott
Who is a Full-Time Real Estate Investor?
3 May 2014 | 80 replies
You win as I'm short and WAS extremely fat.
Account Closed
Interior Trim/Doors Brown or White?
30 December 2011 | 10 replies
For the walls in every room, I use Almond Oil from Lowe's with one accent wall in every room.
Jeff S.
Buy and hold partnerships, one in town...
31 January 2012 | 34 replies
Conceivably you could use a reputable turnkey (yes, we're all sick of this term) company, but you'll pay their fat markup (probably 20-30%) and won't get yields above 8-9%.I will say that once your team is in place, the incremental effort on each new deal is dramatically minimized, as would be expected.
Shannon X.
So is it REALLY possible, (NO MONEY) ?
16 January 2013 | 21 replies
You can also do this once you have fat cash with larger properties to like apt buildings.