
29 March 2009 | 5 replies
Keith,In my opinion, $100 a door is good........but: How much are you putting down, what kind of equity is in the property, what kind of shape is it in, what is the demographic of the neighborhood, and what kind of investor are you going to be?

27 March 2009 | 2 replies
I am not an attorney and therfore can only offer my opinion on this, which is not to be taken as legal advice.

7 January 2010 | 16 replies
Although, I specialize with hard money loans, I come from a technical background in programming before micros were born.There are many factors and many have their opinions on this topic as well those who only suggest and recommends only stuff they can profit from.Look at web development programs as a tool to build a house then there are other tools to maximize building a house in your toobox, same as web development.Primary tool though is your web publishing tool. this allows you to build a website.There were some good suggestions here, but each have their pros and cons.I went from frontpage to xsitepro myself.Why !

6 April 2009 | 7 replies
That is my opinion.

28 March 2009 | 2 replies
This is just my opinion but if your looking for a job then I would consider the banking industry at one of your small local banks because if you learn the in's and out's of commercial lending and develop some good quality contacts it will help give you a step up on getting started in investing in the future.

30 March 2009 | 9 replies
Here are the details:Property type: DuplexPurchase price: $35,00030% down payment: $11,000 (rounding up for simplicity)Loan Amount: $24,000Debt service: $160/monthMonthly rental income per unit: $500 (minimum rental in that area)15% maintenance15% Vacancy (already have both units rented)Monthly Water/Trash: $50/monthTaxes: $142/monthInsurance: $50/monthUsing a real estate investment spreadsheet the numbers do not look bad but I would like to get some opinions on what I have missed.

5 April 2009 | 6 replies
As far as I know this is something that you can do, but please share your thoughts or opinions on this.The one thing we didn't like was the idea that the tenant would know who owned the house.

7 April 2009 | 3 replies
As Ryan alluded to, find a real estate agent to work with; he or she should be able to provide you with the comp data you need to determine a realistic price-point for the location, property and condition.If you need something more formal than doing it yourself but less formal than an appraisal, many agents can perform a "Broker Price Opinion" (or BPO) which will give you an idea of the market value of the property (many agents will charge for this, though).

6 May 2009 | 47 replies
If you want to collect commission, then get a license (in my opinion).

4 April 2009 | 1 reply
I seems like it's a pretty good deal but I'd like some experts opinions and help completing this deal if it makes sense.