
13 February 2013 | 8 replies
I had not been to one for a few years and went to a round table discussion, where they had six topics at different tables.
13 February 2013 | 7 replies
How they massage the rents to the LLC is out of my scope of knowledge.Any cleaver contract language that could structure the deal as I outlined in the first post?

14 February 2013 | 1 reply
Basically, my partner can bring to the table a lot cash - something I can't.

14 February 2013 | 2 replies
Or as an option at least a table to leave flyers and buyers sign up lists.

16 February 2013 | 11 replies
The current lender has a large group of people he works with and after this next job im just going lay my cards on the table and if he's in so be it.

17 February 2013 | 6 replies
And, if both parties agree and get to the closing table and perform, maybe the promise of a snowcone at the fair would do

20 February 2013 | 10 replies
I hope to work on this and get something on the table in front of him within 7-10 days. thank you!

6 May 2013 | 5 replies
If you run an amortization table though, you find almost all of the payments for the first five years are mostly for interest anyway.

28 February 2013 | 23 replies
As you get further and further down the amortization table the principle part starts to dominate and you do get to a point where you would have almost to double up to knock out two at once.

5 March 2013 | 12 replies
I'd give the same advice to new people today as well, if you can't eat off RE starting out, go get with a good insurance company, get a pay check, learn people and sales skills, some finance issues and how to present ideas over a kitchen table.