
24 July 2020 | 2 replies
I'm trying to find a simple solution to putting the security deposits into a 4 separate savings accounts.

23 May 2016 | 1 reply
I can offer great returns for investors looking to park their capital in secure, cash-flowing investments.

23 May 2016 | 3 replies
@Eric Eastman I recommend getting involved with investments that you have security recorded against the property.

2 September 2021 | 26 replies
I had an offer accepted that was 5K less than another buyer because the seller didn't want to wait 30 days for the other guy to secure a mortgage.The risk to me is low- I don't wait the 6 months because my rehabs are actually pretty low in cost (mostly cosmetic) so I'm good with refinancing 75% of the purchase price.

25 May 2016 | 5 replies
Since your new, and don't even know if you can secure financing .. go ahead and put a mortgage contingency with 2-3 weeks. 99% of the time the banks only care about the net purchase price, not the financing type if it means more money.

24 May 2016 | 4 replies
@Greg WempeI sent out emails to our securities attorney, real estate attorney, and an attorney on our Advisory Board this evening to see if they knew anyone.

2 June 2016 | 5 replies
It may not be if you've got regular W-2 income that brings you close to the social security limit or if you want to contribute the maximum amount to a SEP.

24 May 2016 | 6 replies
@Wade Alderson,You're not offering any security.

7 June 2016 | 12 replies
Considering they all have the same term of 12-18 months, and a projected net profit of 1.5x equity multiple, (a $1MM project, with a $1.5MM ARV) which would you rather:-Debt securities, secured by the property, monthly returns, typically at a higher rate, no accrued returns or profit sharing; or,-Preferred equity, higher risk, quarterly returns at a lower current rate, with a set accrued return which brings your total returns higher than would be with debt; or,-Common equity, highest risk, quarterly returns similar to preferred equity, profit sharing upon sale or refinancing the property based on your % equity ownership.Also, any additional information you're willing to share would be great such as the type of deals you've invested in and the performance/results of those investments, especially if they influenced your decision.

31 May 2016 | 31 replies
So the fruits of that is that I can live in a $1.5 mil home with a low mortgage payment and property tax bill (thanks again prop 13 :)With prime real estate your income flow is much more secure.