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Results (10,000+)
Mike Campbell Analyze my numbers please 30 units
12 January 2014 | 1 reply
I don't know how much you are borrowing, length of loan or interest rate.The bottom line is the property is probably worth more than $500,000.Hope that helps.
Michael Baradell How to structure a Private money deal?
12 January 2014 | 1 reply
If you’re asking about specific fees, rates, and terms, these tend to be regional so no one other than a local borrower or lender will be able to answer that.Jeff
Warren L. Mortgage broker vs banker
14 January 2014 | 9 replies
I can't give you a recommendation to either, but I can address a misconception.Brokerage fees can be paid two ways, from a borrower or from a lender (I guess 3 ways as fees could come from both).It depends on what kind of loan it might be and what type of broker they are.
Steeve Breton Visually Impaired (Blind) Tenant?
13 January 2014 | 8 replies
Two others were borrowers, one with a funny story taking bankruptcy who was talked into having new windows installed in the house, but that's another matter. :)
David Fair Note Paperwork
15 January 2014 | 14 replies
It would be best to check before you purchase the note.A clause requiring the mortgagor (borrower) to keep hazard insurance in force is probably already in the mortgage and/or the note.
Nicholas Jones Owner Occupied Requirement
20 January 2014 | 2 replies
Drew MacDermott and Nicholas Jones the only exception for owner-occupancy of a non-borrower is a spouse, not any other family member.
Jason Merchey Anyone Worried About Today's High Housing Prices?
4 February 2014 | 28 replies
I do know that once you limit borrowing resources for buyers, prices go down.
Justin B. After Seven Lean Years, Part 1: US Residential Real Estate: The Present Position And Future Prospects
13 January 2014 | 0 replies
Real income for the bottom 90% has been stagnant for forty years, and has declined since 1999.he only way to keep consumption rising when incomes are stagnant is to boost the borrowing power (i.e. collateral and creditworthiness) of households by inflating asset bubbles that create temporary (i.e. phantom) collateral and by lowering interest rates so the stagnant income can support more debt.This is why the Federal Reserve and the other agencies of the Central State have been reduced to blowing serial assets bubbles: there is no other way to keep a consumption-based economy from imploding.But "prosperity" based on serial asset bubbles and near-zero interest rates is neither real nor sustainable: real prosperity is based on rising real incomes, not debt leveraged on phantom collateral.Read More
William (Will) Amorin Let's talk about selling in PDX and SW Washington
15 January 2014 | 2 replies
There's a low amount of inventory and the areas interest rates are remaining steady at around 4.5% for a qualified borrowers.
Dustan Marshall how did you fund your 2nd deal
25 February 2014 | 21 replies
As a side note, I'm tempted to borrow $30k from a credit card with 3% balance transfer for 15 months, put it in my little daughter's brokerage account, and invest in mortgage REITs.