
2 November 2018 | 9 replies
Also, my relinquished property did not have any debt.Can I purchase the property in a cash transaction and thus satisfy the 1031 exchange, transfer our interest in the TIC into an LLC and then cash out refinance to have funds ready for the next deal?

25 October 2018 | 3 replies
Im in the same boat as you right now, except my investor is just providing the funds, leaving me with everything else.

26 October 2018 | 4 replies
I typically put aside 3% of the purchase price into a CapEx fund and monthly transfer 10% of rent.

24 October 2018 | 3 replies
@Andrew RiggsI would look into investing the property using Roth IRA funds as the gains will grow tax free.

24 October 2018 | 1 reply
Does anyone have any ideas/suggestions on how to get funding for this?

27 October 2018 | 7 replies
There's a reason it's hard to get funding for this type of investment - the risk is huge.I know that's no answer to your actual question, but I definitely question your desire to do this.Good luck to you and please let us know how this turns out!

24 October 2018 | 1 reply
As a lender, if the deal was good and the borrower had all the right things you were looking for, but didn’t want to tie up money, would you fund 100% of a deal?

25 October 2018 | 7 replies
My question to you is: do you have all the funds necessary to purchase the property?

27 October 2018 | 19 replies
The lender is not damaged and presumably the owner was there long enough to satisfy the time requirement.Any *misrepresentation* on a bank loan, like intent, (reason for the loan), income, addresses lived at, rental history, amount of money in the bank, assets, liabilities, employment, time on the job, number of dependents, source of funds (the common things people lie about on applications that get them into trouble) etc, etc are potentially mortgage & wire fraud.

28 October 2018 | 35 replies
Look for a book that provides a general over-view.Once you have the basics, learn how to find deals, fund deals, and manage deals.