
17 April 2015 | 1 reply
As long as the sale preceeds ( and by this I mean by as little as one minute - sign the settlement statement for your sale with one pen and then pick up another pen to sign the settlement statement for your purchase )the purchase you can identify, contract, put money down on - anything you want to tie up the new property ahead of the sale except take title to it.

18 April 2015 | 2 replies
If he is not so much in need to sell quickly as you said but get his price, let him know what the price will be after fixing, and be sure to mention that no matter how much he puts in, the resale will be tied to whats going on into the market, not what he's spent, mortgage included.5) Its fine to get involved as long as you know the best way to approach him and how you can be involved while still helping him reach his best interest.

4 May 2015 | 17 replies
I can guarantee you many of those people end up right back here on this site.When you tie social media together with a website, blog, video channel, podcast, community, and even products (such as ebooks, tools, etc) and let's not forget SEO, amazing things can happen.

19 April 2015 | 25 replies
I'd tie up the contract then offer to mitigate the receivable along with a clause signed by 'C' that affirms the debt and the new terms.

19 April 2015 | 21 replies
@Sean Price state of Florida is cracking down on unlicensed wholesalers.. you may want to follow the advice about transactional funding and or have your own cash... this way your a true principal you come into title and out you go with your profit. there has been many threads on this.. however there are two camps on this subject One camp is hey tie it up try to flip it and make your fee on the assignment and if it does not close so what you have not lost anything more than your EM.. and who cares about the seller its all about me.Next camp is...

21 April 2015 | 13 replies
Why would they be willing to let you tie up the property and attempt to sell the contract?

20 April 2015 | 5 replies
Save the money and keep the paint.Just make sure it ties in with the rest of your rehab and you'll be fine.I once bought a house with 11 different paint colors, but it was all done professionally and it tied together well.

4 May 2015 | 56 replies
Would someone suggest tying it up at $650k and then spend 4-6 months to find a buyer?

21 April 2015 | 8 replies
To tie it in to #1, the purpose of a 1031 exchange is to defer yours gains (ordinary and capital).4.

20 April 2015 | 1 reply
Jointly we would be fine on ratios but my mortgage broker is indicating this is a problem and I would have to do conventional finance with 25% down,1) this is a lot of money -- it still seems the return would work but that is too much $ to tie up2) if we put the 25% down I would be the primary which given this is a "first-look" property I don't think that will flyAppreciate any insight -- perhaps I need a different mortgage broker?