Jon Keli Wood
Owner will creatively finance.
21 June 2024 | 1 reply
Hey Jon,If the seller (note holder) wants to receive cash for the note upfront.
Alecia Loveless
Useless property what to do?
21 June 2024 | 25 replies
The new holder of the right of way is adamant that he won’t let me do anything with the space because he is building a luxury housing development further up the road and he wants the space to remain green.
Gordon Middleton
Boutique Hotel - Partnership LLC structure
21 June 2024 | 10 replies
This would certainly mean the management company as well as the deed holder.
Golan Corshidi
Is investing based on appreciation a recipe for disaster?
25 June 2024 | 125 replies
All of their Account Holders went to the Bank to Close their Accounts!
Samson Oni
Section 8 in Maryland
19 June 2024 | 4 replies
We tell the voucher holder that they are their own best advocate to getting moved in.
Percy Matsunaga
Ignite funding
21 June 2024 | 23 replies
Plus the logistics of trying to get multiple note holders to agree and be happy on servicing, collections, work-outs, and exit strategies sounds like herding cats!
James Martin
AI Phone Technology
17 June 2024 | 18 replies
I am a license holder with Air Ai for cold calling and integrating a full automation follow up in go high level.
Patrick K.
regarding subject to financing.
19 June 2024 | 42 replies
If you were to default to the point where the Bank had to foreclose, any equity still owed to the Seller would go to them as a lien holder.
Brian Bradley
Asset Protection for Real Estate Investors
23 June 2024 | 105 replies
As I'm sure you know, this means the mortgage holder can call a note due and payable in full within a very short period of time upon learning that you've transferred the title to the property (their collateral on a loan) out of your personal name an into something else.
Ryan Overcash
Buying Rocky Mount and Wilson
17 June 2024 | 6 replies
Zip code 27801 has, according to this article Where N.C. mortgage holders are underwater on their home loans, a state-high 10.9% of home loans considered "seriously underwater", Q1 2024.