
3 September 2015 | 17 replies
The range is for whether or not the house already has duct work, model choice, and regional price fluctuation.

28 April 2015 | 24 replies
Just like is it moral and ethical when unlicensed wholesalers talk some little old lady into selling their home for far less than what it would bring on the open market.. are wholesalers proud of themselves when they do this.. of course they are their whole business model is based on taking equity away from a seller for whatever reason.

1 July 2016 | 75 replies
The "we buy houses model" that's not a great dealA 70% of ARV minus costs equal $70,000 -10,000 materials and labor equal $60,000A better way is to use private money is for the REI is to borrow from a private lender $10,000 for materials and labor and do a JV with the sellerThere is pretty low risk for minor rehabs with new people, and I do understand what the OP is feeling that private lender money can get you in trouble if not used responsibly.But you got to get started somehow!
27 April 2015 | 4 replies
High-ranking officials in Georgia, North Carolina and Ohio have also cited Texas in recent months as a model for tax reform. [4]ChallengesMore than 30 countries have some form of land taxation, but this form of taxation isn’t free of difficulties.

28 April 2015 | 13 replies
And check esri tapestry to get a flavor of who those actual tenants will be in the future.

29 October 2019 | 16 replies
Just so you know, Tesla Motors - the makers of the Model S - don't make any money selling cars.

29 April 2015 | 4 replies
I've even offered leads that seem to fit there model nicely to no avail.

29 April 2015 | 11 replies
Just to be clear on appliances you would take pictures and add it as an Exhibit "A" for example with model numbers and serial numbers.When a contract says seller to leave appliances it means nothing.

30 April 2015 | 2 replies
(I drive a 96 model explorer and let's just say it isn't quite as spritely as it used to be).
2 May 2015 | 4 replies
the 2nd association it resonates is the highly consumption-driven society we live in. in my area (coastal, urban southern california) i'm surrounded by 2 distinct lifestyles. there's the majority: seems like 95% of the local population who are renters, driving luxury cars, sporting fancy clothes, jewelry, hairdos, etc but obviously living paycheck to paycheck as exemplified by hardly a day somebody or the other is spotted getting their car repo'ed by a camera crew. the rarer are the landlords, who in this area seem to be of mostly asian demographics (chinese, koreans, japanese) who live obviously very frugally: old 80s model sedan, oldfashion business cloths, always eating simple meal from home, seemingly never splurging $$$ other than into expanding their portfolio), my observance is relatively very few landlords in the area own relatively huge portfolios, each.with the advent of these infomercials and the internet (ie, BP) more and more people want to get a 'piece of the REI pie' and more power to them. there does seem to be this dream of rags to riches and while its ok to dream, do most people actually expect their life to turn around like that, as portrayed in most of the infomercials or even in the everyday setting where the masses living paycheck to paycheck, are spending their last expendable dollars not on depositing into savings acount, but blowing $20 on scratchies etc. in summary, is my observation reminds me of my days when i worked on wall st and the 'ra trace' was so obvious with dime a dozen stock brokers makin 6fig salaries at some point but blowing it on recreational drugs apparently costing thousands of dollars a pop to the point the next week they are broke again and that $ wasnt invested but wasted.