
30 July 2010 | 2 replies
I am seeking some suggestions from some of you out there that may have encountered something similar to this in the past.Approximately 5 months ago, my business partner and I purchased an 8 unit building.

27 December 2010 | 15 replies
The problem I have encountered is that the park managers will not allow me to buy the property from this owner and then finance/resell the property.

17 September 2010 | 2 replies
The Postal Service might get you the info you are seeking, or a change of address filed with the Post Office will cause the letter to go to the new address with those "yellow stickers" from the Post Office.

24 September 2010 | 22 replies
In fact, the worst security and immigration people that I encounter are at U.S. airports.

24 September 2010 | 11 replies
One other thing that you might encounter is insufficient air for proper combustion when many gas burning appliances are located together; this can lead to backdrafting where air for combustion is pulled through the chimney (running the risk of exhaust gases getting back into the house's fresh air).

22 October 2010 | 2 replies
Originally posted by Scott Clark:Are you guys doing besides the mechanicals,roof,foundation and cosmetic inspections.My background is in new construction and am going to start with flips and was wondering if you do other inspections such as termites and gas line inspections during your due diligence.I dont want to over look something that will cost...Thankshi,Mold (if applicable) and septic are the two I've encountered so far as a newbie

4 June 2011 | 11 replies
This is what I recommend (and have recommend multiple times on this site):Put together a spreadsheet of all the rehab areas you will encounter on any given project (I believe there is a thread somewhere where I've posted one), and then make columns for both labor and materials.On the materials side, spend 6-8 hours walking the aisles at Home Depot or Lowes, and make notes of how much all the finishing items you might need cost.

13 December 2010 | 9 replies
So, for instance, if you're selling a property for $50K on a LC, you're hopefully no more than $35 to $38K into it...a down payment and a small payment history should allow for the deal to still be profitable should you encounter a walkaway.

6 November 2010 | 3 replies
that presents some interesting twists and turns I've never encountered.

13 December 2010 | 9 replies
For the majority of experienced landlords I've encountered, a 20% ROI is very good.