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18 August 2017 | 22 replies
Check out the details below.
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16 October 2008 | 4 replies
There are two detailed articles at the realdata web site, "NPV, IRR, FMRR, MIRR, CpA – Stirring the Alphabet Soup of Real Estate Investment" Part 1 and Part 2.
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2 September 2008 | 4 replies
The details of the terms are up to you and the owner, so pretty much everything you bring up is up to the two of you.The bank will want to be in first position.
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4 September 2008 | 4 replies
OK, so it looks like this–• I send an LOI to buyer agent• I hammer out the details with the seller/agent• I find the asignee who then puts down earnest money• buyer (asignee) gets funding• buyer completes sale with seller• I get paid (pre-arranged with asignee) fee at closing
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6 September 2008 | 3 replies
Can you possibly share details with all of us?
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22 October 2008 | 17 replies
I would have one you typed yourself and just have the seller sign it.Make it generic with the main point being that he or she cannot afford to make payments and is having personal health issues.I find banks are flexible with w2's and pay stubs if the hardship letter is dramatic enough.
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12 November 2008 | 14 replies
I'm a beginning investor and i see the power of using private funds but i just don't know the proper and legal way of doing this.now i know about talking to people you know, other investors, and marketing to other high net worth individuals, which all of this i would consider the first step in the process.the second step i'm guessing some will say is working out the agreement/financial details with the your private lenders once they say they want to invest (which i plan on doing all this in step one, letting them know they're either going to invest as a lender or has a partner and this is what they'll get in either scenario)but my questions are:1. when do i have to worry about the SEC?
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7 September 2008 | 4 replies
A Treasury official confirmed that regulators were working out details of an intervention plan on Saturday.
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13 September 2008 | 10 replies
Give details of the two properties?
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9 September 2008 | 2 replies
With many clients I go into detail about the lender's par rate to me as a broker versus a "marked up" rate.Sometimes I know I've lost them when I start mentioning pricing adjustments and factors that affect their rate/cost.