
8 September 2008 | 2 replies
Whichever the seller is most comfortable with.

17 September 2008 | 5 replies
You obviously have something in mind but since I am not clairvoyant I have no way of knowing what you are going to do with whichever one you ultimately choose.

26 October 2008 | 19 replies
As Wheatie indicated, the best deal you will likely find is 80% of contract price OR appraisal value, whichever is LOWER.

2 November 2008 | 5 replies
. * I would go to 50% ARV on Rehabs.Ideal CandidateStrong income, Strong Credit, Strong Financial AssetsHands OffIf you have money as collateral in a Commercial bank......They will work with you.They will loan 80% of appraisalIt would be helpful if the bank would refinance these loans once the repairs are completed.Also, it would be helpful if lease options were structured as Fair Market Rent plus more as an option payment.Example:Market Rent = $1000 pmOffer $950 pm plus $200 pm as option payment (subtracted from future purchase price)Future purchase price can be tied to a future appraisal OR a set figure, whichever is higher.Ideal location of homes for tenant buyers - STRONG EMPLOYERS in the area that are recession proof.Consider not giving an option to purchase, but a Contract for Option to Purchase.

9 December 2009 | 14 replies
hi allvadimyou need to ask to make me a collegue and I will send you thru what we are looking at doing and we can look at your property no problemcross wind very interesting as we are looking at nearly the same except we are using llc in each state and the structure is very similar we have been working on it for about 3 weeks now and its as close to our structures we have here and I think it can work hi tim I am learning your banking structures but it seems to be very similar if not the same as ours and yes we do commercial funding or borrowing here so we understand the type of loan system we want to doand what you call pool loans we call syndicated or umberella loans between lenders so the loans stay in place just a larger bank sits at the top and pools all the different bank loans together under its bannerI am trying at this stage to find out the credit unions and the smaller banks lending criteria mainly for refinance not for purchasehere we have very different lending criteria for refi as against purchasewe do % of purchase price or val which ever is the lesser which is the same therewe have a higher % for a refi and that seems the same therewant I am trying to find out an this will be different for different lendershow long from purchase can you refihere for resi its 6 months but for comm its straight awaywe are looking at 60 to 70% lvr or what you call lvt.

29 September 2009 | 10 replies
Not saying this was their fault..perhaps it was my fault to not read the fine print more clearly, or perhaps they were a shoddy company...DON'T HATE ME..I SAID PERHAPS...anyway yes, they kept my 50 dollar deductible and all they did was tell me that it was not their problem..owell..I'm sure this doesn't always happen..just putting in my limited experience with one..good luck whichever way you turn.

21 July 2006 | 14 replies
They might have a means by which they can manage the property at a reasonable fee.Please note that which ever management agency you find they will charge you an extortionate fee to manage the property unless you lease it to a renter on a long term.In Houston you have many options.

24 March 2010 | 9 replies
That is not quite the way it works in Philadelphia, the sheriff requires $2000 or 10% whichever is greater, then you have 30 days to come up with the balance.

13 October 2006 | 9 replies
Above all, whichever agent you do decide to use, be upfront.

28 December 2006 | 3 replies
They will either use hard money lenders or conventional financing, whichever will work better for them, and then sell it as quickly as possible.