
14 December 2013 | 13 replies
Although, I won't fight too much about giving up control of the day to day stuff as long as he/she continues to use the maintenance people and contractors that I have sought out and with whom I have negotiated for extremely reasonable service charges.

13 December 2013 | 37 replies
The beauty of those deals is you can list them while their paying the mortgage.For example, a wholesaler picked up a duplex at auction a couple of years ago when the market was extremely soft.

6 December 2013 | 2 replies
I came home for lunch and had unknown and extremely rare condition in my spinal cord bleed.

10 December 2013 | 14 replies
I'll be the one with the loud, obnoxious laugh and the big, cartoonish smile.

11 December 2013 | 4 replies
Also I didn't know they had investment conventional loans they sound like they are extremely hard to get in this 'jump through hoops for finance market'.

24 February 2014 | 26 replies
Sorry to rehash an aging thread, but...I have an extremely wealthy friend who owns nothing but his home and an office space as far as real estate goes.

9 December 2013 | 9 replies
Account ClosedOr another way of looking at it... if there is a cap rate of 10% and the expenses just rose $11,000 per year in increased flood insurance premium, then the value of that property just declined $110,000.I would be EXTREMELY cautious about buying any flood area property as the costs are slated to rise in successive years per the law, and I would be looking to get out of any flood property now before rates increase every year down the line.There is the possibility of getting a personal flood certification that shows your property not in the flood zone, but that costs money and must be accepted also.Another alternative is to raise the property.

10 December 2013 | 25 replies
While Canada has no gift tax and Shahriar could technically "gift" any amount to his relative in the U.S.A. without tax implications at home - the transaction(s) would still be subject to U.S.A gift limits and taxation - he would not be investing at that point and could never "legally" accept any form of capital repayment {gift disguised as a loan} or profit from the gifted capital.The Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) takes an extremely dim view on loans disguised as gifts and, at their discretion, decide that the gift was really a loan or investment and treated as such from a taxation perspective.

11 February 2014 | 27 replies
This is extremely risky.

21 September 2020 | 31 replies
It's very management intensive and more geared towards the start up community, young self employed people that can work from a desk i.e. tech, and where office costs are extremely high.