
1 October 2015 | 28 replies
Let's approach this from another angle.

25 September 2015 | 11 replies
We took different approaches to land lording.

24 September 2015 | 0 replies
We’ve got a new approach for home finance: equity sharing.Homebuyers can get a lift from investors in making a down payment on a house.Homeowners can access equity in their home by selling a portion of their equity.

6 October 2015 | 49 replies
@Rob Beland @Rich Ng @Shaun Reilly @Russell Brazil ... for all the commentsAfter gather all this information, I think I have two approaches:1) Communicate about the remaining days left (ask her to pay up to departure day) and tell her to pay me that.

5 October 2015 | 11 replies
Thanks for taking the time and really rethink my approach!

24 September 2015 | 2 replies
Either the owners have the right to sell or they don't but I am probably missing an approach or something there).

27 September 2015 | 7 replies
However, I am struggling to figure out the best approach for financing, if I do not have all the capital traditionally required for a down payment.If I decide to go with a lender, am I really going to have to come to the table with at least 20-25% down?

28 September 2015 | 9 replies
Your conservative approach should serve you very well, so long as you are REGULARLY putting in conservative Offers on MANY properties, rather than being tempted to be less conservative on one particular property by trying to second-guess the Seller and coming up with excuses to increase your own Risk.

1 October 2015 | 20 replies
They each interpreted that differently based on their personality (and political stance it seems), but if I had to guess at the end of the day, they both get in their car, drive home and don't think much more about it.Having said that, I would guess doing something to make their jobs more complicated may not be the best approach.

29 September 2015 | 3 replies
As tax season is approaching, I'm trying to find more ways to reduce my taxable income to get down to the more favored brackets.If I have passive income (rent) coming into an LLC, can I pay myself a management fee to count as income to invest into the solo 401k?