
19 April 2022 | 7 replies
Every movement from one crypto to another or from crypto to US dollars will cause a taxable event.

17 April 2022 | 10 replies
Now with the interest rate hikes I do not see alot of movement and those properties that are left are way outside my price range for my first buy.

21 October 2022 | 13 replies
Often times what happens is that if a new owner does not raises rents they are eventually forced to sell due to frustration, lack of profit etc.It is much better for your tenants that a small business that cares about their community owns the property vs you having to sell in the future to a big corporation that will raise rents in perpetuity and not make repairs at all.Not sure this was the advice you are looking for but hope it helps.

20 October 2022 | 4 replies
“Cities that are well-placed in terms of obtaining additional long-range air links end up with a greater number of business connections with distant places....The movement of people fosters the movement of capital: the ability to establish face-to-face contact between people is an important factor buttressing the ability to do business.” https://www.bloomberg.com/news...Austin metro is taking off!

2 March 2022 | 3 replies
Lender: Jonathan Haas & Chris Valenzuela - Movement MortgageHELOC lender: National Bank of Arizona - Wilmot BranchGC: Lance Ross - LR Properties, LLCHome Inspector: Chad Casper - Pillar To Post Home InspectionsRockstar Investor-friendly Real Estate Agent: that's all me, baby ;-)

3 March 2022 | 5 replies
Brian Currier at Movement Mortgage

5 March 2022 | 0 replies
I just wanted to throw a line out and see if anyone has knowledge of the incremental movement from allodial common law form of land ownership to the legal/eminent domain form of purchasing interest in real property.
9 March 2022 | 3 replies
Have you seen movement for more regulations in Puerto Rico in the last few years?

20 March 2022 | 8 replies
Hi, just a thought…The seller could consider first selling the property to an irrevocable trust where he is the discretionary trustee, the trust then sells the property to you, and then he/trustee can elect to defer any capital gains, perpetually, and draw the funds down at his discretion against the Demand Note (liability due to him from “selling” property into the trust…which had no cash at inception).

17 March 2022 | 8 replies
There is a movement by the hard money community to call themselves "private lenders" because they claim the capital comes from private sources, which is rarely the case.