
23 June 2014 | 6 replies
In the other setting, with two separate loans and transactions, you would be subject to normal lock periods like any other loan because that is essentially all it is.

2 September 2014 | 49 replies
If this house were not in the Marina district of San Francisco, you wouldn't know that the seller is asking anywhere near the list price of $16,000,000...http://www.redfin.com/CA/San-Francisco/298-Chestnut-St-94133/home/542030

23 May 2014 | 13 replies
., the price premium a condo possesses vs. coop is the price of freedom essentially. 80% of apartments in Manhattan are coop.

6 June 2014 | 17 replies
(to be a broker must be an Ohio agent for 2 years, complete 20 transaction sides, complete some business courses or have a collage degree & have an office with a sign stating your operating hours)Essentially what you could do would be "Net Listings" There are very very strongly discouraged.

26 May 2014 | 8 replies
Essentially asking the owner if anyone of the current tennants are past due or historically a late payer would be something I am interested in.

20 May 2014 | 7 replies
I'm now essentially in a position where I have to find a provider and tell Fidelity to rewrite a check in their name.Im not self employed so the solo 401k is out for the time being.

5 June 2014 | 4 replies
You lose essentially all of the tax benefits.

21 May 2014 | 12 replies
They called me and are really angry and irate to the point where the tenant is using profanities and wants me to significantly lower the rent, otherwise threatening to not pay the rent and essentially evicting him.

29 May 2014 | 13 replies
Flipping is essentially a job, leading to ordinary taxable income.The good news on the SS is that if you have a job and then flip a house or two, you can get above the maximum withholding pretty easily.

23 May 2014 | 8 replies
I would suggest you both try to project your total hours to invest in the project and see if the work is roughly even.Otherwise if he is pricing the job the 'normal' way from his perspective, how much would you charge the 'normal' way to serve essentially as a general contractor on the job?