
2 October 2012 | 7 replies
Between the hot market, lack of inventory, and every rookie on earth claiming to be a real estate investor, it's hard to get an offer accepted.I like to look at 10-20 houses at a time.

3 October 2012 | 10 replies
Ask him to run one for you to support his claim that his house is worth 1.2M.

16 October 2012 | 21 replies
They have a variety of small claims cases, also over a decade plus ago.
8 October 2012 | 9 replies
The allonge chain and the assignment chain should mirror each other.When a mortgage/dot is purchased all rights, claims and interests come with it.

3 October 2012 | 42 replies
I've found regular small maintenance can avoid bigger (& costlier) issues down the road.
5 October 2012 | 5 replies
This company claims to be able to make loans above the 10 property cap.

27 May 2019 | 23 replies
Is there some sort of vetting process a regular joe can put these people/companies through to weed out the scammers?
1 October 2012 | 4 replies
So far, this is what I know, but I'm looking to fill in the gaps:Form LLC (rule of thumb may be 1 per property or $300K)Transfer dead to LLCCreate a business checking account for itKeep a good divide between personal finances and LLC financesTo get money out of your investment, pay yourself a regular salary.

3 October 2012 | 11 replies
You would be ok for a while but interest rates are adjustable and will change (probably increase) when the market rates change.The best idea, if you can qualify, is to buy with a regular mortgage from a lender.

4 October 2012 | 5 replies
I think more of what you are asking is how the occupancy level and accuracy will affect what kind of loan you can get and how much you will put down and how much the debt service will be.A regular lender at 90% occupied maybe 6.5% fixed at 75% ltv.If you get into value add deals you will pay points and a much higher rate to fund and lower LTV.You will then need to refi after stabilizing about 1 year out.So you build the carrying costs into the amount of time needed.The books will determine the verified income and actual costs.From there you run your desired cap going in and that tells you around the price you want to pay.Now if the books are out of normal standard margins you have to ask yourself why that is (deferred maintenance,undisclosed credits to tenants,disguising fees paid to themselves in other line items,etc.)