
27 September 2008 | 1 reply
It said that "the collective efforts of servicers and government officials to date have not translated into meaningful improvement in foreclosure prevention outcomes."

8 November 2008 | 79 replies
Government officials who promoted social engineering through their homeownership initiative that was designed to move minorities and the poor into being homeowners.

2 November 2008 | 5 replies
I've been investing in RE for well over a year now, and have had 2 properties that I've been relatively succuessful, a SFD property bought as a REO , repaired cheaply and increased equity by 40% and a 6 unit apartment complex that is now cashflowing and has increased by about 400% in equity.We will be finalizing some credit account the comming week to secure enough money to start buying atleast one property per month to add to our portfolio.Our goal is to buy properties in decent neighborhood at no less than 35% ARV , rehab and then lease-option or other type of seller financing/RTO deal.

30 September 2008 | 7 replies
I am having trouble figuring out how to try and secure a legitimate corporate veil!

30 September 2008 | 4 replies
What route would you reccommend I take to secure financing for some homes that are in foreclosure?
2 October 2008 | 27 replies
We are a representative public and the elected officials should not govern by polls and what the majority wants at any given moment.
30 September 2008 | 9 replies
We have also recently started an LLC, which we use for a small business, but would it be beneficial to try and do this through the business, since the other two properties were secured under our personal name?

1 October 2008 | 4 replies
It goes towards the down payment for the purchase of the house.Even if it didnt, and was used as a security deposit, it still is never ours (unless they damage the house in some way).Is this correct?

1 October 2008 | 5 replies
My payments are 1200 a month, me and my wife (we've never married) have secure, decent jobs and can save about 1000 a month.

2 October 2008 | 3 replies
Since they're moving out early, you can usually include the cost of re-renting in the items deducted from their security deposit.