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Results (2,445+)
Siye Baker Rich Weese from Janitor to Multi-Millionaire(Review)
16 March 2017 | 57 replies
I have entered a knowledge-consumption stage, and due to there only being so many hours in the day, I must be efficient with my time.
Alia Abbasi Missouri City/Pearland Rentals
3 July 2014 | 0 replies
They would like a 2 year lease on a 4 bedroom house in Missouri City or Sugar Land at $1500-1700/month.Client B is a married couple with a 2 year old daughter.
Micheal Waldrup $75,000 for maximum cash flow. How would you do it?
14 July 2014 | 39 replies
Try to remember a site like BP for the most part is very sugar coated.You are going to find very few "failure" stories on here.
Brandon Luke To pay off rental properties or not...that is the question!
26 July 2014 | 26 replies
If you are just starting out and plan a long career of real estate acquisitions and you don't have a sugar daddy, then financing of one sort or partnership, joint ventures are the way to go.If you are winding down, selling off property, preparing for carefree retirement, then maybe all cash is the way to go.
Michael G. I DECLARE: No Landlords should pay for their Tenants' Water !
2 December 2019 | 42 replies
That fact that each tenant is responsible for paying all of their own utilities is in fact explicitly stated in their Leases.And, as a side note, I will add that after we implemented this system we observed that the building's water consumption dropped by 40%!!!! 
Pete K. Made a Tax Deed Mistake
8 April 2014 | 15 replies
If you buy many site unseen Be sure to Get plenty of SUGAR for the Lemonade!
Mike Morey First Multi-Unit
11 April 2014 | 24 replies
Link: http://www.zillow.com/homedetails/96-Summer-St-Waterville-ME-04901/84971756_zpid/So, what you think might be more like 1500 gallons in oil consumption will certainly change the numbers around.
Denise Mayo-Walley New member in Sugar Land, TX (Houston, TX Metro)
24 April 2014 | 10 replies
Hello all,My name is Denise Mayo-Walley and I reside in Sugar Land, TX with my husband and 2 kids.My husband and I will be entering the field of real estate investing with a buy & hold strategy and a long term goal of generating enough income to cover our living expenses.
Patrick Shaughnessy New Member Intro & Real Esate Technology
7 February 2015 | 37 replies
Question #1:Short answer:yes, usually.Longer answer:It depends upon the model that is being used.There are models, i.e. predictive tools that forecast various outcomes.Some models predict the likelihood to become 90+ Days Past Due (DPD), to declare bankruptcy in the next X moths, to open a retail credit card, to open a bank card, to open a premium bankcard, to revolve a balance, to pay down debt . . . . well, you get the picture.Most often closing a credit card does hurt one’s credit, i.e. depress a consumer’s score, because the credit card’s available credit is removed from the denominator (all credit available) that is used to calculate utilization, the mix of credit card changes (esp. negative if the credit card is a higher-end card), and one’s credit history is shortened (assuming the closed credit card has been open for some time).Question #2:The quickest way to increase one’s credit score is to use of the many outfits one sees advertised, i.e. credit repair, credit fix and one will usually see a quick bump.However, like eating candy when one is tired, one gets the sugar rush (the increased score) but there is always a crash (when the bureaus catch up to this questionable practice).
Mark Yuschak Econohomes.com
27 January 2013 | 24 replies
She was nice, civil against our harsh ways and didn't sugar coat much, if anything at all.