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15 May 2016 | 5 replies
Would like to fix it up and pull equity out of it within a 2 year period to buy a duplex.
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17 May 2016 | 12 replies
Identified as a non-conforming structure, the town added "CAN ONLY BE REPAIRED/MAINTAINED UP TO 15% OF CURRENT ASSESSED VALUE IN ANY CONSECUTIVE 12 MONTH PERIOD."
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20 May 2016 | 19 replies
From crowdfundinsider.com:"The most important restriction is that companies can only raise $1,000,000 in a rolling 12-month period using these new regulations."
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18 May 2016 | 9 replies
The software I worked on also lets events recur at regular intervals, so you could enter one event once; set it to recur, say, every 30 days (or whatever custom period), and then you'd be able to see on an actual calendar a list of what your day, week, month, or year looked like at a glance.Is this for rental properties?
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17 May 2016 | 13 replies
Some lenders will require a seasoning period where they want to see that you've been on title for 6-12 months (depending on the lender).
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16 May 2016 | 1 reply
I am now getting one to two of these a day.. since I am on no other social media except BPI know this is coming from these folks trolling BP I am going to remove my e mail"Hello,I currently have investors who are looking to invest into ventures that can give a minimum of 4.5% ROI for a period of 5-10 years with 18 months grace period and No Early repayment penalties.
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17 May 2016 | 14 replies
Here in Alaska the market has been booming for a long period of time.
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16 May 2016 | 1 reply
I thought of this idea just incase I had some financial issue personally during the layoff period...
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17 May 2016 | 8 replies
However, these plots of lands are going to be sold to the builder/developer in segments, likely spanning a period of 12-16 months.
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17 May 2016 | 7 replies
You just said it in the last paragraph, a construction loan will work, you will only pay interest for a certain time period before it switches to a conventional or commercial loan. being the house is under an LLC you will have to go to a commercial mortgage specialist at your bank and they will set it all up. i did this with one of my properties, purchased it with equity loan from my private residence, then took a construction loan from the bank to do the work and based it on the ARV and the rental income that would be coming in, the work was more than what i paid for the house, converted a split entry single family home to a 2 family, everything brand new inside. you may be able to get the repairs done and on the market before the loan goes from interest only to a P&I loan.