Dan D.
The Tax Question
23 December 2015 | 9 replies
The other ways you hear that phrased on the site is: Don't buy retail, make sure you can force appreciation, get a fixer-upper, etc. etc. etc.
Robin White
New tax plan and 20% pass through income deduction
5 May 2018 | 10 replies
M&M is a brokerage, not a CPA or legal firm, so I would guess that some V.P. just heard the phrase "pass-through deduction" (this phrase is not in the tax code) and speculated that one would actually need a "pass-through" entity in order to take the deduction.
Tope Rockland
Cameron dunlap SCAM!!!
28 July 2022 | 33 replies
And remember that anyone using the phrase "MONEY BACK GUARANTEED" should be avoided at all costs.
Jorge Abreu
5 Reasons You'll Love Investing Passively In Real Estate Syndicat
18 August 2022 | 1 reply
Minimal Time RequiredHave you heard the phrase “set it and forget it”?
Gabriela Martinez
Wholesale required paperwork/contracts
10 January 2019 | 0 replies
Where can I get copies of a wholesale purchase contract with the phrase (and/or assignee).
Joey English
Private money loans
15 August 2016 | 1 reply
Private money loans:How many of you have heard the phrase, “it takes money to make money?”
Carlo Santarelli
Screening Tenants
11 August 2014 | 40 replies
Something like: "We do not rent to lawyers, law students, drug dealers, <other undesirable but unprotected groups>" How do you phrase your rejection letter to a lawyer and what if that lawyer is also a member of a protected class?
Jay Helms
How to convince elderly mom/pop to share verifiable income/expens
24 May 2018 | 5 replies
Maybe phrase it in a nicer way but this happen more than you would think.
Paul Fagot
Facebook ad success
6 February 2018 | 11 replies
For both retargeting and outreach ads, try using the same media and text phrasing used in your ads on the landing page that you are sending customers to.
Chad Clinton
Questions about burdensome a coimplicated lien on two rental properties
7 August 2015 | 3 replies
Every loan document I've ever seen always has some phrase that says something that the loan will "inure to the benefit of assignees, beneficiaries and or heirs".