
15 October 2016 | 8 replies
If they don't take care of their current place or car they want take care of your place.I use this lease agreement:http://utahlandlady.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/03...Good Luck!

13 October 2016 | 22 replies
Be careful with gurus, they give you 80% of what they know in their 3 day trainings, then its $20k or more to learn the other 20%.

5 October 2016 | 6 replies
I have a few questions...At closing, will the lawyer arrange to have these liens paid or is this something that I have to take care of on my own.

10 October 2016 | 6 replies
Sure.Here's how I would put it together if we're claiming primary residence..... get a very well drawn out letter of explanation probably involving her office or location of work being near the subject property and have the employer document the request to be closer to work so the story flows and is plausible in the mind of an UW.Now if you're going to put down 10% anyway you could just structure it as a second home purchase as second homes can be purchased with as low as 10% down up to a max of 417k loan amount in most parts of the country and especially so in Los angeles, Orange county, San Bernardino, and Riverside, and Ventura counties surrounding you.

6 October 2016 | 2 replies
For those of you who care about the broad economic outlook in your investment areas, here's the recent economics report from this month. http://www.jec.senate.gov/public/_cache/files/b2fb1607-cbaa-4d20-871f-c58170cbf5c0/jec-state-economic-snapshots-september-2016.pdfIf that link doesn't go through, google for 'senate state economic snapshot September 2016' and you'll probably find it.

6 October 2016 | 5 replies
or peak of the market (be very careful to buy at a discount)#2 Cash flow vs.

12 October 2016 | 15 replies
Be careful about "multiple offers" they lie!

7 October 2016 | 5 replies
The bigger ones don't really have as much incentive to care about you as anything more than a number.

12 October 2016 | 34 replies
If someone cared enough to check that one beforehand that terrible deal (rip off) would have been avoided before it was even offered.
23 October 2016 | 9 replies
I think this is partly due to property taxes that are higher in Texas due to lack of an income tax.