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29 May 2018 | 3 replies
I don't know much about anything outside of the Twin Cities and surrounding areas but I'm sure someone from Western Minnesota will jump in!
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29 May 2018 | 3 replies
Hey all,I’m considering a big move, from Western Washington to eastern New Hampshire.
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1 June 2018 | 4 replies
Is Networth the same as New Western?
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4 June 2018 | 7 replies
The syndicator is Western Wealth Capital.
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3 June 2018 | 5 replies
I am aware of the "big" ones (Networth and New Western), but am wondering about smaller ones out there willing to walk me through the process.
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25 July 2018 | 7 replies
I’m going to introduce myself more down here I’m from the Bitterroot Valley western Montana south of Missoula.
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4 June 2018 | 18 replies
He's got really clever subject lines tho so I open every one of um. its the high desert western desert land game.. there was about 2 to 3 million lots created in SO CAL AZ NM TEXAS N CAat the turn of the century through about the 50s before the subdivision map act came into play.. they have been traded around in tax sales for the last 100 years.. there are a few gurus who sell a course how to buy and sell .. but its an old old old old game nothing new.buy at tax sale for 100 dollars (literally) sell on contract for 500 dollars 20 dollars down 10 a month.. if they make it one year you doubled your money. and because the price point is so low no one cares about title insurance its just deeds being swapped.. its the business I grew up in..
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17 July 2019 | 27 replies
I want to show that you can find cashflow in nice areas of the north side if you look hard and get creative.I just brokered a 3 unit in the neighborhood SW of north and western intersection in walking distance to the 606 trail and Western Blue Line stop.
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3 June 2018 | 5 replies
@James Wise Per your request.Coming out of the late 1800s most of the major west coast cities that we know and love like LA SF PDX SEATAC were all subdivided by the same engineering firms at least SF and Portlandia were.. this led to land speculators in the day going out into the Western deserts and other remote areas.. buying what were large land holdings , Spanish land grants and other lands that were not govmit owned.. then in the day you could simply create massive subdivisions buy doing basic surveys off of the base and meridian lines.. which all of the west is surveyed off of... this is called section land.then create these massive tracks of lots.. some were like up in the apple valley, Lancaster, Barstow type areas mainly 5 acre tracts.. and were done on a grid pattern.. streets in ( mapped but not built) and of course spiraled out of a small little town off the railroad track or the few roads that existed in those days.. you took your map and recorded it at the county, county was happy they just got 5 thousand lots they could send out tax bills on..
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5 June 2018 | 27 replies
@Eric SchwakeI would recommend you speak with the non-recourse lenders: First Western Federal Savings and North American Savings Bank.