3 March 2020 | 2 replies
I can think of some ways to calculate how much of their electric the furnace has used based on the gas bill and some electrical testing, but nothing that quick or precise.

10 March 2020 | 20 replies
Understand what they're charging per sq ft so you are more precise when running your numbers online.

6 March 2020 | 31 replies
I want them to be much more precise then "looking for a deal in x price range and x general location" For example, if you said you want a single family home, built after 1975, in a certain zip codes and priced below $150 per sq ft, I guarantee you that every time one of these came on the market, you would know immediately!

5 March 2020 | 8 replies
What precisely is the "no luck?"
9 March 2020 | 11 replies
I find that is a real rarity in foreclosures, and in several hundred foreclosures, I had precisely two clients damage the property to any significant extent.I saw you received some advice about considering the environmental factors in your foreclosure resolution.
5 March 2020 | 2 replies
So just make sure you find out exactly what you need to do and be precise.

8 March 2020 | 12 replies
@Ivonne PinedoHave you articulated precisely the property style / type / location etc that you’re looking for?

8 March 2021 | 22 replies
To be precise, properties I am purchasing with my turnkey provider are slightly more expensive (120-150K range, higher rents) and appraisals came in lower by 5-10K.

13 May 2020 | 12 replies
Sure, your first month or two owning this home might be a real slump (I don't know about indefinitely - anyone who catches the virus now shouldn't be contagious a month from now, which means we'll probably see waves of people staying home, and then ideally life will return to normalcy after this initial panic), but these atypical circumstances are precisely why real estate investors insist on factoring in vacancy to your cash flow analysis.

19 March 2020 | 5 replies
You got to be very precise in this environment and have reserves.