
17 August 2020 | 0 replies
With more and more companies figuring out how to efficiently and effectively enable their employees to work remotely (and for longer than most of us initially expected), homeowners throughout the country are re-evaluating their needs.

17 August 2020 | 0 replies
Agent’s Supervision of Third PartiesExcept as otherwise herein set forth, in the management, maintenance, operation,repair, or rehabilitation of the Premises, Agent is authorized and empowered to hire,employ, discharge, and otherwise supervise third parties, including without limitation,servants, employees, contractors, subcontractors and other personnel engaged on behalfof and at the sole expense of Owner.Owner shall have sole responsibility and liability for the acts, transactions, oromissions of such third party.

20 August 2020 | 1 reply
1) Actual current gross (pre-tax) W2 income is used for salaried employees.

28 September 2020 | 15 replies
But as @Dave Foster said, you can always start a 1031 and then bale out on it with no penalty.
21 August 2020 | 2 replies
Hi @Jeremiah Alado, you'll want to have income (if you are an employee of some place then great, but if you are self-employed then you'll need 2 years of tax returns) and you'll want to have debt that is low compared to your income.

26 August 2020 | 5 replies
I'm buying a SFH from a City of Trenton employee.

1 September 2020 | 23 replies
My wife and I are 58 years old, foster parents, semi retired with 5 grown kids , and also adopted our 4 year old son.

27 August 2020 | 12 replies
I am an employee (W2) of the two LLCs I own.

30 August 2020 | 5 replies
But from all of the land content I consume, the big names (even in coaching) still do significant work and have only a few employees, which is a great upside to the land business, but they still take buyer/seller phone calls themselves etc etc

27 August 2020 | 7 replies
(The Commission will reevaluate or add certifications, designations or credentials in the future);--include as accredited investors, with respect to investments in a private fund, natural persons who are “knowledgeable employees” of the fund;--clarify that limited liability companies with $5 million in assets may be accredited investors and add SEC- and state-registered investment advisers, exempt reporting advisers and rural business investment companies (RBICs);--add a new category for any entity, including Indian tribes, governmental bodies, funds, and entities organized under the laws of foreign countries;--add “family offices” with at least $5 million in assets under management and their “family clients,” as each term is defined under the Investment Advisers Act; and--add the term “spousal equivalent” to the accredited investor definition, so that spousal equivalents may pool their finances for the purpose of qualifying as accredited investors.They did not index income/wealth thresholds to account for inflation, which would have decreased the number of individuals that qualify as an accredited investor.Not everyone is happy with the changes ( https://www.sec.gov/news/public-statement/lee-crenshaw-accredited-investor-2020-08-26) but syndicators should be.