
19 April 2014 | 1 reply
Although this next part is uncited, there’s a ton of search engine analytic data which indicates that website visitors are more likely to click on an ad showing a photo of a woman, versus a photo of a man.

21 April 2014 | 12 replies
I recently finished graduate school and now work as a mechanical engineer, so I finally have enough income to purchase a home......yay!

22 April 2014 | 4 replies
If the lender or broker gets an approval through fannie mae's automated underwriting engine without any assets listed on the 1003(loan application), then the lender will not ask you for bank statements and you will be able to work around the letter of explanation BS that comes with a loan in today's market.

18 April 2014 | 5 replies
And Robert L is right, ask your buyer's what they are looking for, where and how much they are willing to spend and then go find it.Reverse engineer this thing and your buyer's have done half the job for you.

1 May 2014 | 7 replies
We are good to go to begin our engineering study and submission of architechtural plans.

2 May 2014 | 0 replies
My investor buyers are reluctant because the loan (8.5%) is too steep.I know Phill Groves had been teaching his AMPS system where investor/wholesalers serve as transaction engineers and link up the seller and the retail buyers for a fee.

5 May 2014 | 3 replies
Listening to all the BP and Mark Kohler podcast, read the UBG, hunting through the forums, in the middle of the J Scott book on flipping houses, and talking to local investors - input is always welcome.Background is Aerospace Engineering (rocket science) so I am very excited to broaden my horizon and learn the real estate industry.

3 May 2014 | 2 replies
Mine, while maybe more involved was $1,100 in fees, $2,800 in survey/engineering, 140 days.

5 May 2014 | 7 replies
I am a freshman in college majoring in engineering.

6 May 2014 | 8 replies
I would check with the water authority engineer on how much the actual average usage is for that size and bed unit mix.I think the shown annual expenses are low and once you dig into this the properties expected cash flow will keep going down, and down, and down.Ask for historical occupancy the last 3 years.