
12 June 2014 | 1 reply
I have an opportunity that just presented itself for a possible subject 2 deal, and I'm going to have to learn the ropes very fast!

17 June 2014 | 2 replies
I am hoping a software is available to be able to categorize apples to apples by categorizing -for example all the "Sold" 2bedroom 1 bath homes within a the subject property's community/neighborhood.Thank you.

12 June 2014 | 0 replies
I may be selling an investment property "subject to" in Vinings, who is a good lawyer who can walk me thru the paperwork that knows this process very very well?

16 June 2014 | 13 replies
Some examples of out clauses are: "contract subject to partner approval", "contract subject to inspection" "contract subject to due diligence" I would definitely consult with a real estate attorney about these.
14 June 2014 | 6 replies
This is just for conventional financing.The subject property you may need 6-12 months plus the above for other properties so it basically means if you want to cash out you basically have to manage your cash in a manner which suggests you "dont," actually need it since you have a ton of reserves.

13 June 2014 | 6 replies
I believe there is a recent member blog post about the subject.

13 June 2014 | 0 replies
Including the right to assign addendum as well as subject-to's to allow me to back out if i have to?

14 June 2014 | 4 replies
I'm thinking of two different strategies and would like to know which you think is best, advantages / disadvantages of each:A) Offer the lender a cash purchase of the property under a short saleB) Offer the administrator of the estate a subject-to then offer to purchase the nonperforming note with cash from the lenderThanks for your input!

1 May 2015 | 18 replies
If a seller does bring it up or wants a large amount we always tell them the EM is a non-issue no matter the amount because we will not subject EM for any reason whatsoever no matter how strong a deal appears to be so whether it is $500 or $5000 it isn't going to matter.

4 September 2014 | 10 replies
I've read a few threads and blogs on here but couln't find anything comprehensive on the subject.