
24 October 2012 | 11 replies
While it's not put on the deed (not a deed restriction), you are committing fraud if you sign the short sale approval with intent to resell in less than 90 days.I have no idea if they enforce it or not, though I'm guessing it's more of an issue of whether they can find out or not.

21 January 2013 | 46 replies
Not because they'd make more money, just because they regret quitting on a major commitment.

4 October 2012 | 6 replies
I liked Romney’s commitment to cross the isle and work together with the Democrats.

11 December 2012 | 45 replies
Again, we see that as the purpose for having a profile.If people don't have a complete profile, that is going to tell you something about their commitment to transparency and interest in connecting/networking.

30 October 2012 | 13 replies
There is no reason it should take longer than that to get a loan commitment letter for the buyer (regardless if it’s FHA, VA or conventional).

24 October 2012 | 3 replies
It was about two months ago that I made the commitment to move from my regular, corporate sales gig to real estate investing.

11 November 2012 | 22 replies
the lender should have received a lender's title policy (if they keep decent records).One thought though -- when I review title commitments for my client I sometimes find the old liens and when I tell the title company that those are old and should not be a part of the title, they remove them.
9 November 2012 | 7 replies
If you have cash, you have more options than even you are currently aware (until you commit your funds to projects).

10 November 2012 | 15 replies
Otherwise you're committing loan fraud.How its typically done in an assignment is that there is one HUD-1.

6 January 2017 | 13 replies
Don't commit to doing anything.