
23 July 2016 | 9 replies
Maybe you can take everyone that has sold in the last 6-12 months, and calculate the average time of home ownership.

27 July 2016 | 8 replies
Those are two separate institutions and chances are the entity which has legal ownership of your loan also holds the note which will not bear either Fannie or Freddie's name in whole or in part.

5 August 2016 | 1 reply
However, with the health department, fire department, building department, and all the other departments coming down on you the day you take ownership, that is not a good thing.
8 February 2016 | 5 replies
You are just looking to transfer the ownership from your personal name to your LLC?

28 March 2016 | 13 replies
In scenario B, you have only 10% of the ownership.

20 August 2015 | 14 replies
The responsibility to order the POS rests absolutely with the owner / seller.The closing date came and the ownership was transferred but no POS was carried out.

2 September 2015 | 23 replies
They've been among my best earners, but I bought them well aware that I might have a hard time selling them and planned my life/portfolio accordingly.Since you've already registered a concern about exiting this property if I were in your shoes I'd perhaps reverse engineer from that concern to see if that is in fact the type of first property you want to buy and own.Now, buying us good, and having an exit problem is much better than not owning and not having any ownership problems so just make sure you want to own THIS one, but even if you don't, don't let it dissuade you from buying a deal this year.

16 June 2016 | 18 replies
@Brian Higa The LLC is not an issue as long as the borrower's have joint or individual ownership of 100%.

1 November 2016 | 0 replies
What was REALLY funny is that the underwriter didn't get the joke......She conditioned to see the last two years of tax returns for the Han Dynasty, thinking it was a business that the borrower had an ownership interest in.

13 March 2017 | 10 replies
That way over time, I gain equity in the LLC and eventually take over full ownership.