
8 March 2019 | 6 replies
pretty skinny .. would want to know it was very solid deal.

16 August 2019 | 41 replies
We MUST have a solid financial plan in place now, because in four years ALL of her student loans will kick in 6-months after she gets her N.D. degree.

16 March 2019 | 53 replies
PS one of my very short stints was attempting to sell dental equipment door to door.. you know high speed drills low speed and delivery systems and chairs and lights etc.. sit down dentistry was just starting to take off.. turned out Dentist before that had a huge problem with back aches.I worked with a start up called healthkit.. they had a delivery system way ahead of its time.. it was all numatic and was used in the military because the holder of the drills was solid aluminum block 2 X 2 X 6 with no moving parts.. unlike in those days the ones that looked like something out of a sci fi movie and would break all the time.. but of course ours was the most expensive and well .. being that and being the industry was very difficult to sell.

20 March 2019 | 10 replies
Here is anecdotal evidence from one data point (me).

7 March 2019 | 0 replies
It was a great deal for both parties, considering the buyer has 2 solid tenants with a 1% return MoM return.With the apperciation amount and inital capital, I set up a 1031 exchange.

7 March 2019 | 3 replies
Moreover, without a solid W-2, you're probably going to be dead in the water unless you come through with another way to satisfy traditional lending requirements.

7 March 2019 | 1 reply
I'm going to move and will be in a location where I can easily invest in a few MSA's within easy driving distance.The challenge to getting a solid handle on what those MSA's are doing overall is finding decent data: it's either for a single point-in-time (not showing year-over-year trends), dated, not reputable/no idea where it comes from, or too much money to take a chance on it answering my questions.Any recommendations?

7 March 2019 | 2 replies
Im thinking its a pretty solid deal and I was relatively conservative with pricing.

12 August 2020 | 6 replies
I guess they could do an air sample, but if it's bad enough you can smell it in a room with some visual evidence.

16 March 2019 | 1 reply
I see many write that you can buy a multi-family, live in it for a year and purchase another multi-family.I can see going from a multi-unit house to single family house but can’t see taking advantage of the second tier entitlement from single to multi family, I know va loan officers and underwriters can be sticklers due to the va loan guidelines, so my question is to any former underwriters/loan officers, what are considered some legit reasons to take advantage of the second tier entitlement and what tangible evidence needs to be provided?