
28 August 2006 | 3 replies
like if i have my own website, can i type it here to refer someone to check it out?

21 October 2006 | 4 replies
Your question sounds as if you are referring to TIC -- Tennant In Common.You buy them from companies that deal in suchthings.

30 August 2006 | 6 replies
Flipping has basically two different meanings....You could get a house at an auction, own the house, fix up the property and then sell for a profit....orFind a house that is well below market value, get it under contract, and sell the contract to another investor for a small profit...2-5k.You are referring to the first approach...it's much easier to say rehabbing becuase everyone wil know exactly what you mean.

16 May 2012 | 16 replies
The turnaround time is just about instantaneous for online reports, and they do offer telephone verification of landlord and employment references if you're willing to pay a little more for it.

2 September 2007 | 13 replies
Another solution: give the money to someone you trust with your life, mom, dad, etc......then have them buy the house for you. if you get married and divorced the house wont be in the question and you were just "renting"Did you make her sign a prenup, or do you trust her enough to stick with you?

14 September 2006 | 5 replies
Better to judge by their rental history, credit check and employment references.

11 September 2006 | 3 replies
Although a solution exists (selling), they keep waiting until there is a Notice of sale posted on their door.

10 October 2007 | 51 replies
or you could use this formula:gross rents devided by 2 - per annum mortgage payment = possible cashflow - this is a quick snapshot view of cashflow...now if you're thinking..okay now what...refer to beginning of this post - it all depends on what you or your company can handle.other things to consider are:interest rate & termsmoney downloan amounttaxes Fixed ExpensesVariable Expensesmarket valuemarket speculationrentals in area - vacancy ratesquality of rentersproperty management - you, your business, or someone elsesrepairs - you doing the rahab or relying on contractors (good luck)now you probably know all this so it's redundant BUT, in my opinion, all of the above is really what counts, bottom line.

29 April 2007 | 12 replies
Ask for references, portfolios, and compare quotes.

20 March 2007 | 2 replies
1 Set a realistist list price for the property2 When you reject an offer please let the agent that it listed with know why it is rejected maybe we can bring the transaction together.3 Don't make us pay out of pocket for work done on the property and expenses to maintain it.4 Don't pay a reduced commission and require a referal fee5 Understand when we say the price is to high we can back it up and will and most likely already have.6 If it is in an area that we don't work let us reject the listing without fear that this is the last call we will get.( You don't want to know how much of a pain it is to drive 60 miles to drop off "all original paperwork")7 Don't sit on offers for a week without some kind of communication.