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18 February 2024 | 6 replies
So the answer really depends on the areas you are considering.
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18 February 2024 | 2 replies
This benefits the buyer more, since depending on how it is written, it can lock in a future price and if the buyer would benefit from exercising the option he may, if the numbers run against him he can back out.
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18 February 2024 | 6 replies
@Jeremy Pace @Peter MckernanIt depends on how the trust is written.
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18 February 2024 | 16 replies
I may have even had them on board from the start depending on how difficult the process appeared to be initially.
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18 February 2024 | 5 replies
It all depends on the lender and their terms.
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19 February 2024 | 10 replies
Hi Andrew, There's no wrong answer and it certainly depends on your personal life situation and future goals.
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19 February 2024 | 15 replies
@Daniel Suarez, Another option depending on your desire to go deeper into the sec 8 world would be to 1031 and purchase multiple less expensive properties.
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20 February 2024 | 16 replies
With that, we became the American Association of Private Lenders—and we began spreading the word.Finally, Some DefinitionsUnderpinning the concept of minimizing the use of “hard money” in our industry is a recurring theme of standardization—that the root of the issue is too many interpretations of what the same terms mean.We offer up the following definitions for discussion, debate, fine-tuning, and eventual consensus [last updated 5/9/2022]:Private lender: Any non-depository individual or entity that primarily originates business-purpose loans secured by hard assets, generally real estate.Hard money lender: A subset of private lender where creditworthiness is determined solely by the securing real estate collateral.Correspondent lender: A subset of private lender where the closed loan is sold to investors.Portfolio lender: A subset of private lender where the closed loan remains in the lender’s portfolio.Fund manager: A subset of private lender where, depending on the fund structure, the deployed capital is sourced by offering exempted securities to accredited and occasionally non-accredited private investors.Private investor: An individual or entity that seeks a return by deploying capital through a private lender or fund; the investor may or may not be named on the loan’s promissory note.Private money broker: Any individual or entity that acts as an intermediary between a borrower and a private lender without directly originating the loan.