
11 February 2007 | 0 replies
If you don't have a buyers agreement signed with them it makes it even more difficult for them to be on your side because they are basically a representative of the seller.

23 February 2007 | 5 replies
I'm basically just looking for opinions and doing the best to read each and every important thread you successful guys out there have to offer.

22 February 2007 | 6 replies
His answer reflects Andrews -- you can do it but, basically the real money you'll "save" is only a couple hundred dollars, money that would be offset right now by the increased tax preparation costs.

8 March 2007 | 1 reply
So my question is basically which is better?

26 February 2007 | 11 replies
Basically, the right Seller couldn't care any less.

10 June 2007 | 12 replies
Usually that information is passed on to the novice investor and it basically goes in one ear and out the other.

4 March 2007 | 10 replies
The material is very basic - good for someone with little to no experience to get some ideas.

22 February 2007 | 2 replies
Basically, you buy a property and the tenant (something like a Burger King, Dollar General, etc.) pays everything (including taxes, insurance, all building/maintenance costs/etc) and you just collect rent on a long-term lease.
5 March 2007 | 26 replies
I've been reading the MLS for months now, and have copied basic info into a document--mls#, price, location, even tax number and a blurb.

25 February 2007 | 7 replies
from the basic to the more advanced.