
21 December 2016 | 25 replies
However, it is up to the lender to exercise their right under that clause to accelerate the loan.
16 December 2016 | 10 replies
We feel pleasure when we can control others, when we can threaten them, when we can fully exercise and impose our will.

14 December 2016 | 2 replies
Under the Act, no creditor of a beneficial owner or of a trustee in its individual capacity has the right to obtain possession of, or otherwise exercise legal or equitable remedies with respect to, the property of the Delaware Statutory Trust.

12 January 2017 | 5 replies
Here’s what I would want to know and how I would do the exercise.
11 February 2019 | 10 replies
To avoid the entire issue, I provide a seller concession as a % (usually 3%) that declines the longer the TB takes to exercise.

2 January 2017 | 20 replies
or $2700/month cash flow which almost pays for the rent of $3000 on you primary residence.So the reason for this mental exercise is what about a fairly expensive car purchase (MSRP $48000)Scenario #11) Lease : $3000 downpayment and $600/month for 36 months at 12,000 miles/yrtotal cost: $24,6002) Financed: $5000 downpayment. 0.9% rate.

17 January 2017 | 10 replies
Six months later I exercised my options and bought all three properties with six months equity already built in.This is in Oregon so I can't speak to the rules and regs where you are at.

20 October 2016 | 24 replies
(a $300 a month or more spread is best).Should they exercise their option to buy in two years, the amount of the deposit would come off the purchase price in the form of a credit.

25 October 2016 | 29 replies
@Jay Hinrichs are you saying I could be a little more aggressive at the auction because I know my friend will not exercise redemption rights on me if I win bidding?
15 October 2016 | 12 replies
Should they exercise their option in two years, the amount of deposit would come off the purchase price.In short, you get paid three ways. 1) You've collected a substantial down 20,000 (or more)2) You've made $550 per month cash flow x 24 months = $13,200 (the other 700 paid down your debt $16,800 so your balance to the seller is now $102,200)3) Your buyer gets financed at 139 (159 less the 20,000 credit) 139,000 - your 102,200 balance = $36,800 profit on the back end.So in two years you've been paid:$20,000 front end + $13,200 in cash flow and $36,800 on the back end for a total of???