
23 October 2019 | 1 reply
Title says it all ... just curious if anyone has any data about the resale value of otherwise identical properties, one zoned res 1, one zoned res 2.

24 October 2019 | 5 replies
Yeah, there's always a chance ... your property could not appraise, your credit identity could be stolen and this may take time to repair, the market could shift and banks could tighten their lending standards on investment properties ... the possibilities are endless.Moral of this story - you have to weigh 'chance' and 'probability' differently

29 October 2019 | 2 replies
This really is a simple thing. three identical lots, two combined, one separated and split even.......

7 November 2019 | 8 replies
I figured $130k for two reasons. 1) as I mentioned across the street was a near identical home that was purchased for $130k by an investor who decided to tear down and rebuild (think they are doing multifamily) . 2) the seller shared with me a contract from a known wholesaling/buy and flip investor group that offered $130k out the gate.

8 November 2019 | 6 replies
Identical 3 bedroom houses next door to each other.

3 November 2019 | 9 replies
They end up with the exact same interest rate, and just for kicks these two people are otherwise perfectly identical in all other ways.Are there scenarios where A and B will have different write-offs at the end of the year?

6 November 2019 | 15 replies
If everyones bid is identical besides one person then you know whos lying.

7 November 2019 | 16 replies
AirBnB could easily charge a $100 fee to verify the identity of an owner and their ownership of a property.

17 February 2020 | 7 replies
i'm considering to take a loan from him, but to ask for social, tax returns, and bank statements, he can easily use your identity for anything he wants.he has only 2 recommendations...

17 November 2019 | 7 replies
We had the identical situation several years ago with ours, it was a stuck contactor,