
6 May 2009 | 47 replies
If they refuse, the buyer can simply bring along their own buyer's agent and the seller agent still ONLY makes their half of the commission split paid by the bank.I don't understand the confussion here.Granted, this is not a standard practice, but an experienced and open-minded agent would not balk at it as they still get their side of the commission, make their buyer happy, and move on to the next deal.What is the problem?

22 April 2009 | 16 replies
Perhaps not as they would be in first position and therefore protected, but by today's standards, they may have an issue with it as your debt coverage ratio could be out of wack and concern them with your investment not producing enough cash to pay all the bills.Contact a non recourse lender and ask.

3 April 2009 | 0 replies
If I did that I don't know if I'd be missing out on any tax deductions for next year that could hurt me in the long run.

30 September 2018 | 91 replies
That 512% looks impressive, but i have yet to meet anyone that can spend %'s I have some that are Way better by your standards then, one of my more recent deals I paid $7K for the property spent $27K on the rehab paid for it using a line of credit I have against other properties i own, got an appraisal of $92K have a renter at $870/mo and did a cash out at $50K (banker would give me 75% but i dont need it) so if i have none of my money in the deal, and i pushed the value up $58K whats my COC?

18 August 2018 | 4 replies
Hi guys - someone mentioned that the standard CAR lease agreement isn't what you should use for San Francisco leases.

21 August 2018 | 6 replies
Industry standard price in rural Missouri for this issue is probably $850.00.

18 July 2019 | 15 replies
Originally posted by Account Closed You should have come to the last East Bay Sunday meetup, it was all about OOS, but the presenter shared that cool litmus test above (where you invest passes with flying colors btw) that kind of guts the standard "turnkey provider" model.Another market not far off, Stockton, same test as above - steady income (rent increases will likely at least track with inflation, if you zoom out to the 10 yr horizon), gradually increasing population (a driver of asset/home appreciation, 10 yr horizon), 2-4 unit properties still affordable.Do it for Oakland and obviously you will see incomes through the roof, population gradually increasing, but sticking point will be the prices present a barrier to entry that not everyone will be able to handle.

17 August 2018 | 5 replies
Currently my two partners and I generally use as long of amortization as possible, which varies from 20 years for non-recourse and 25-30 for standard loans.

13 September 2018 | 45 replies
From that 3% begin deducting signs, advertising, contracts/disclosures, attorney fees, and time off work.

17 August 2018 | 2 replies
Are there any standards for what is considered in airport flight path?