12 February 2012 | 1 reply
The one question i get is "How can you assure me that you are not going to sell the beneficiary interest to othe investors" What can i do so these investors wont feel more secured when buying my deals.

20 October 2014 | 22 replies
Another idea I had was to keep a credit card on file and charge it on their move out for any outstanding balances if the security deposit doesn't cover it.

16 April 2012 | 29 replies
So for every phone call I get (when there's a vacancy), 7 aren't interesetd when they find out where it is, 2 are being evicted from somewhere else, and the final one has to jump through several hoops to get the first month's and security deposit together.

16 July 2016 | 10 replies
I am thinking that this scenario would be a good way to give lenders security for a line of credit without completely sapping the ROE if one wishes to take a passive role in the underlying asset instead of managing the project.

19 February 2012 | 16 replies
They did not put down security deposits (why do you think I got such a great deal on the short sale:)) and I want to convince them it is in their best interest to just leave.

10 February 2012 | 7 replies
If it's a secured investment, the custodian will likely need a copy of the promissory note and DSD, which would be provided by the closing attorney or whomever you have write them up;4.

16 February 2012 | 11 replies
So, you shouldn't be fighting with an agent at all, only their broker (and you probably shouldn't be fighting with the broker either).Second, you only pay a commission if the deal is closed (there are some edge cases where you'd technically owe a commission on a deal that's not consummated, but those would involve you not living up to an executed agreement, which you never had with the buyer the first time around).Third, if an agent/broker has an issue with a buyer breaching an agency relationship, that is between the broker and the buyer, not the seller.

12 February 2012 | 6 replies
My contribution equals approximately 85% of the “all in” costs through bank funds I’ve secured.

17 October 2012 | 55 replies
-Secure your unit during rehab or you'll be sorry.

30 April 2013 | 12 replies
Nothing for vacancy, long term capital (even if its rehabbed, if you plan to hold for 20 years you'll buy roofs, furnaces, ACs and other pricey items), routine maintenance, make ready costs between tenants (some, but not all, may be covered by security deposits), legal expenses, lengthy evictions, accounting expenses, etc.Now there will be some months, most months even, when you only expenses are the PM, taxes and insurance.