
18 December 2013 | 73 replies
This is assuming all are equally seasoned and experienced.

5 February 2014 | 30 replies
Logan,Everything Darrell said is true, I follow credit closely and spend time on credit boards,,,there are companies that will offer to sell you 'seasoned corporations" with great credit,,,it just doesn't work that way in today's environment.Banks will only lend money to people/companies they can show can pay back the loans (by law),,,work with a mortgage broker, hopefully one that does hard money and traditional mortgages, have them look at your credit situation and develop a plan to be able to move forward,,,credit can be destroyed quickly, but takes time to establish.andy

11 December 2013 | 4 replies
I am so excited to learn from the seasoned pros out there.

23 December 2013 | 31 replies
So to me I need those extra answers to proffer an opinion on whether its good, bad, or middling.I've come to the opinion that low income rentals can be run profitability over time only by seasoned owner operators.

15 November 2013 | 18 replies
Also ask them about seasoning periods, loan to costs (LTC), and loan to value (LTV) requirements.

7 May 2014 | 204 replies
Where I am, buyers have to look at everything as it comes on the market, regardless of a holiday season.

17 November 2013 | 5 replies
Good luck, and if you ski/board, see you at Whitetail this season!

21 November 2013 | 9 replies
My thought regarding what the investor is doing is that he is securing the property with his cash, letting the property season for the bank at which point he can get traditional financing.
20 November 2013 | 14 replies
It would be nice to get some tips from the seasoned landlords in BP.

3 October 2014 | 2 replies
It seems that reading other forum posts indicate that banks might require me to season the title in my personal name for 6 months before refinancing.