
22 May 2023 | 6 replies
I didn't read anything about being accredited for Techvestor.Accredited investors are those individuals classified by the SEC asqualified to invest in complex or sophisticated types of securities.To become accredited certain criteria must be met, such as having an average yearly income over $200,000 or working in the financial industry.Sellers of unregistered securities are only allowed to sell to accredited investors, who are deemed financially sophisticated enough to bear the risks.Accredited investors are allowed to buy and invest in unregistered securities as long as they satisfy one (or more) requirements regarding income, net worth, asset size, governance status, or professional experience.Unregistered securities are considered inherently riskier because they lack the normal disclosures that come with SEC registration

13 April 2011 | 6 replies
But I can see how you could address this specifically in your lease agreement and hit the deposit, subect to compliance with laws governing deposits.

30 December 2012 | 18 replies
I unfortunately didnt find a way around their crap but I've heard others state that they told the representatives that they need the duns number asap so that they could complete an application for a bid on a government project.

30 June 2011 | 16 replies
George time is a killer on rehabs because of holdings costs and the right market timing on selling.I would find out if your market is REO or short sale driven.I have other broker friends across the country that list REO for residential.Big banks are almost finished working out a settlement with the government on the ROBO fiasco.Word is later this year banks are going to start shredding the backlog of shadow inventory.This will put extra downward pressure on many markets for price and concessions given to buyers while increasing holding times.What I tell investors is to analyze at what percentage your market is stabilizing,appreciating,or declining.What you know is what the market is doing today.It's hard to predict the market in a few months when the rehab took longer than expected.I would price it within the bottom 50% of Actives given they are not grossly overpriced.Pay more attention to the recent sold's.You do not want to chase the market down.I don't know how many times I have seen sellers of any property type price high and chase the market down.If they would have priced correctly they would have sold much faster and for more money in a declining market.It sounds like you bought into a marginal deal with heavy holding costs and longer repairs.Best thing to do is too dump it quick and move to the next one where experience will get you better margins going forward.Good Luck

10 April 2009 | 7 replies
All failed, to their great surprise, and the professor told them that socialism would also ultimately fail because when the reward is great, the effort to succeed is great; but when government takes all the reward away; no one will try or want to succeed.Could not be any simpler than that....

29 March 2010 | 4 replies
It may be the only way to generate the massive amounts of revenue needed to pay for all government obligations.

15 June 2010 | 18 replies
This is even true of other government employees such as immigration officers at airports, security people at the airport screening places, etc.

8 June 2008 | 7 replies
I live in California in the Central Valley and I am currently renting for $715, its not close to $1000 but I have always been told that it is best to start investing in real estate by buying your own home and then turning around and selling it in 2 years seems how the government lets you put the profit in your pocket.

22 May 2012 | 17 replies
This will help you get a better overview of how your local government views real estate and investing.

31 May 2012 | 2 replies
If you are pooling investors to make hard money loans, most states have had regulations that govern that for quite sometime already.In regards to "moving and holding money".