
10 May 2017 | 25 replies
Houses and developments started popping up everywhere, property value on existing homes went through the roof, HELOCS and 2nd mortgages were being taken out on homes, and the money was used friviously financing cruises, international vacations, and time share purchases.

14 May 2017 | 1 reply
Some say this is because they prefer the flexibility to travel are the U.S. and internationally.

28 April 2017 | 3 replies
I also had a broker who I wanted to intern for tell me that without a RE license the things I would be able to do would be limited.

1 May 2017 | 0 replies
I have recently moved out of the US and working abroad as an expatriate - but now I am getting paid for my work in the local (non-US) currency/bank.I would still have my permanent resident status in the US and tax returns (I have an accountant helping with my taxes relating to how the US handles taxation for expatriates), but I would obviously be missing my (US-based) pay stubs, and my US Bank statements would show chunks of money being transferred in (that I would be doing from my international bank where I am receiving my salary).I was just wondering if getting a mortgage or refinancing an existing mortgage in the US was still possible, and if there were any tricks/pointers that I need to know about?

2 May 2017 | 5 replies
Is maintenance done internally or do they use an outside vendor?
4 May 2017 | 4 replies
Or they take interns or Associates under their wings.

9 May 2017 | 2 replies
I have a potential tenant who wants to put in an application for a property I have for rent. They are from another country and are relocating to my area for a few years with a very well-known company. I have a letter...
10 May 2017 | 9 replies
If you payoff your rental, your equity inside the house earns a net internal rate of return of exactly 0%.

10 May 2017 | 2 replies
I went to Florida International University and I worked 95 hours a week and took 4-6 classes a semester.