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30 April 2020 | 3 replies
In Jay's Book on Negotiating Real Estate, he mentions referencing a company policy during a negotiation that states the company must take possession of the property at closing (no lease-back), which seems fairly straight forward, but definitely could have caused some headaches if it wasn't followed.
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2 May 2020 | 2 replies
He says this is probably where the cable company has their junction box and that could cause the area to hold water.
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1 May 2020 | 7 replies
The real concern that I have is that if the Fed keeps printing money, which they currently are that this could even lead to hyperinflation, which then causes interest rates to skyrocket and therefore significantly decreasing demand (lot of people cannot afford the high down payments, etc + high interest rate make properties less attractive to investors that want to create a positive cash flow).
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3 May 2020 | 11 replies
The reason for the question is cause I’m not sure if this money will be taxed?
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1 May 2020 | 6 replies
If either tenant loses their job and suddenly can't pay rent, and you can't evict because of the moratorium, then that would cause an issue.
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10 May 2020 | 1 reply
@Dustin WhiteWhat do you think is causing that?
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3 May 2020 | 1 reply
Depending on what the event causing the breach is, the lease would terminate 5 days after the notice or a longer period in the lease or in the notice (if the notice specified more than 5 days).
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2 May 2020 | 13 replies
A lot of the uncertainty that causes buyers to back can be removed if the Seller ACCURATELY and COMPLETELY lists all income, expenses, and turns over copies of records.
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8 May 2020 | 29 replies
And it’s the construction activity in my mind that causes it.
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1 May 2020 | 2 replies
Two because of a slow communicating agent and my most recent one because of the corona virus causing my lender to change the reserve requirement from 3 months to 18 months which forced me to walk away from the house.