
6 May 2009 | 47 replies
There are afgents out there happy to work with investors and their creative ways of thinking so it will be hit or miss to find them.Good luck.

2 April 2009 | 2 replies
But let's say you have found an investor friendly title company that will do double closings, simultaneous closings, another words they are creative.

2 April 2009 | 6 replies
I would think priming would ensure a better adhesion.

20 September 2018 | 5 replies
A pre-transaction review would be meaningful and most smart investors will ensure they have proper guidance in advance of embarking on a new venture, but any custodial requirement for such would be entirely impractical.Further, most custodians requesting this are fully aware that some LLC providers are actually providing the review service and others are just allowing you to sign off saying they are your reviewer when they have no real intention of performing the service - at least not in a meaningful way.
16 August 2018 | 1 reply
I don't recall the details, but Larry seems to be the king of creative deal making.

17 August 2018 | 5 replies
They talked about the following method for those who don't want to be super active in real estate:Buy one house a year, ensure rent covers all expenses at a minimum Have each house on a 15 or 20 year noteOnce you hit year 16 or 21 (whatever you amortize the loan for), start doing cash out refinancesThis method only requires one house (more would work too) a year, and would greatly supplement or even provide a retirement.

23 August 2018 | 13 replies
Hello, What are some creative financing tactics and strategies that you have used to fund a deal with zero out of pocket?

24 August 2018 | 11 replies
If you are doing creative financing I could see some options but is that what you're talking about?

22 August 2018 | 8 replies
They are there to help and to protect your interests - to ensure things are legally done and to ensure the deal closes.

20 August 2018 | 3 replies
Building owners, having tenants in the building, shall post a notice in a common area of the building informing tenants that the owner of the building is required by law to supply and install carbon monoxide alarms in accordance with Section 908 of the Philadelphia Fire Code, and shall provide at least one tenant per dwelling unit or rooming unit with a copy of the manufacturer’s instructions for the alarm to ensure that tenants understand the purpose of carbon monoxide alarms, how they operate and appropriate action to take when an alarm sounds.