
17 February 2011 | 4 replies
Great deal IF your assumed numbers are correct AND no external obsolence such as declining area, next door to slaughter house, etc!

15 February 2011 | 17 replies
It will probably always be a rental with this external obsolesence.Comp it out, review the cell phone lease very carefully, if any doubts have an attorney review it for you.

12 September 2011 | 17 replies
Don't forget that the cell tower is external obsolesence, having a devalued effect on the property as a single family dwelling and will likely never be put into the secondary market forfinancing.

19 February 2011 | 3 replies
Some have said I did the wrong thing, shoul;d've used external boiler mate.

27 August 2012 | 40 replies
I'm sure that would depend on sevaral variable external forces and personal goal factors.On the other hand, there are two sides to real estate: investing and business.
10 May 2013 | 18 replies
Stick to within 6 months, if possible, and no more than 1 year old unless ABSOLUTELY necessary.Find houses that are the same style, built in relatively the same time period, have similar features (garages, porches, decks, etc), are similar in size, are similar in number of beds/baths, etc.Adding MLS rules won't necessarily help you find better comps...finding comps is as much an art as a science, and it requires more digging (looking at pictures, figuring out external circumstances, reviewing DOM and price drops, etc) than just plugging in an MLS search.

9 March 2010 | 4 replies
For the purpose of introducing BP leads with possible external deals.

16 March 2010 | 6 replies
It took roughly 4 months and 3 negotiators.They only did an external BPO only for me, which I was fine with cause it came in so low.

7 July 2010 | 37 replies
So, if a property value were headed to the basement, say due to external factors, like a factory being built down the street, or deflation, or for any reason and you had tenants in the buildi ng, but a few left and you were afraid the property might not cash flow, you would give it back to the seller (lender)?

8 July 2010 | 10 replies
Targeted buyers are primarily those who do not want to be bothered by external maintenance typically associated with home ownership, sometimes because they only live in the patio home for part of the year.[1]There is not usually a legal definition of a patio home, and some houses called patio homes may alternatively be marketed as townhouses, garden homes, twin homes,[2] or carriage homes[3].