
28 February 2012 | 11 replies
Roofing and foundation work can eat $7,500 very quickly.

5 March 2012 | 49 replies
While it states buffet, they'll credit the buffet's cost toward other menu items - The Benedict (eggs benedict) is awesome and with a drink is about the same cost as the buffet.

1 March 2012 | 28 replies
err this guy wants his cake and eat it too.... it seems all he will be doing is GC.... which unless he is the best contractor ever, doesnt mean much... i mean you even said he is slow to work sometimes. which is not good at all.tell him is he is serious he should put his own money in, if he cant, then have him bring you deals. if he can bring you good deals than use your cash to finance the deal, pay for materials only and when the house sells give him 30% after splitting all the rehab costs with him. i havent done my first deal yet. but i have been burned in the past with partners with no equity. my suggestion is to stay away, unless he does truly bring you some good deals. then work with him. he needs you to fund the deal as much as you need him to get the house ready.

13 November 2013 | 82 replies
I don't suggest walking on egg shells.

4 March 2012 | 2 replies
Those can greatly eat into your cash flow.
9 March 2012 | 3 replies
You'll have to sacrifice risk or profit... can't have your cake and eat it too.

15 May 2012 | 40 replies
After that the holding costs start eating away..There is just sooo many little expenditures that go into flipping...

19 April 2012 | 14 replies
I didn't want the seller to have to eat it, because they were basically giving their house away anyway, and they have a few more for me to sell, so I didn't want to taint the relationship with a bad transaction.

8 March 2012 | 9 replies
Not that it matters, no agent is going to take a property off the market without you signing a contract and presumably providing some amount of earnest money.It sounds to me like you're trying to "have your cake and eat it to."
9 March 2012 | 11 replies
It would have to be an incredible deal for the payments not to eat up all your cash flow.