
18 October 2005 | 8 replies
I think you can quit paying PMI when your LTV hits 80% (check your promissory note).Option #2 Refinance at 10 or 15 years fixed.

24 May 2007 | 9 replies
I don't have the money to buy them, but I know quite a few people with money.

28 August 2008 | 11 replies
If you are good enough to make 5K a month wholesaling...what I call the "short money"...you're missing the bigger picture of the real estate business.The long money...the continue cash flow from owning a free and clear rental property whose rents continue rise with inflation...is the big payoff of real estate.Let's get real...if you find properties others are willing to pay you cash for...you just sold away a lot of expertise and effort for pennies on the dollar.Get in this business for real and quit chasing the "fast but short buck".Or at the very least, stop calling it "investing"...Take some words of wisdom from Warren Buffet:We believe that according the name 'investors' to institutions that trade actively is like calling someone who repeatedly engages in one-night stands a 'romantic.'

18 August 2010 | 20 replies
It was a buy and hold that needed quite a bit of rehab, so not too big a deal.

15 February 2009 | 10 replies
You'll learn how to do it from doing that.By the way guys, hard money lending is quite different and more costly than private money, so don't confuse the two.

25 February 2010 | 5 replies
I am not quite sure what exactly P and S stand for in this case.

18 April 2009 | 11 replies
I don't know if I should just cut my losses and start selling my properties (They would actually be quite profitable if they were fully rented).

30 October 2011 | 3 replies
*experienced in estimating repairs/costs*can do quite a bit of cosmetic work myself*licensed RE agent*have a multitude of marketing platforms(also interested in ca$h partner)[email protected]

17 March 2011 | 8 replies
Speaking for Indy and in agreement with the other two, the midwest is incredible right now.You could get quite a bit more here in Indy for $80k-$100k than you probably could anywhere on either coast.

9 April 2010 | 6 replies
You buy your FHA home, you then have it quit claimed into your LLC, you then rent out the home to renters who give you a rent check made out to your LLC.