
10 May 2007 | 0 replies
They paid $4,600 for the 80 acres and bought it through a trust fund, the land was owned in massive amounts by some school or something like that.

20 February 2011 | 69 replies
In my opinion, the 50% Rule could certainly become the 55% Rule in the near future as the government attempts to cover our massive debt.

3 October 2007 | 25 replies
and massive (time-is-of-the-essence) action plays a critical role in staying ahead of "competition". good luck and hope you have continued success.

4 August 2007 | 15 replies
sounds like you need to stop beating yourself up and take massive action, keep at it until you accomplish what you desire.
8 December 2007 | 16 replies
The weight is high for the amount of energy stored, batteries are dirty to make, they wear out fairly quickly and have massive amounts of hazardous chemicals in them.
1 May 2008 | 31 replies
Yes I could down load it and yes sounds like it is a massive problem and getting worse.

23 March 2015 | 73 replies
I just take huge risks, apparently.Now I've found lots of alternative CPC sources that aren't as ridiculous as Facebook/Google (as an aside, 99% of what you see running on these sites is material that they would ban, except they are being "cloaked" by affiliates...basically the ad revenue that sustains these massive companies comes entirely from people whose ads they explicitly ban..something you might want to know if you own any stock in them).

16 March 2014 | 22 replies
Now, I can see entering into a contract at whatever price, contingent on him being able to convey title, where you give him some refundable "earnest money" which he has permission to use toward his foreclosure costs (this is your scenario #1).Scenario #2 seems less workable to me because the assignment just makes a cloudy title situation worse and would probably result in a massive mess if the owner redeems.

28 February 2014 | 33 replies
I will say that you will have a better combination of cash flow and appreciation in the IE and Bakersfield markets than you will in OC, because OC is so out of whack with price/rent ratios that you would need massive appreciation to make up for the yield you are losing out on.To give you a concrete example- our Columbus, OH purchases have averaged $31,500 in aggregated cost for $675/mo in gross rent.

26 February 2014 | 6 replies
But like I said, my list is very targeted (my county, tax distressed, 40-100% equity, absentee owner) so the list isn't THAT massive.