
14 June 2009 | 11 replies
Additionally, please note that by tomorrow, the award tally will be adjusted to be retroactive for all member activity.

22 November 2011 | 2 replies
The offending text of the bill is in section 101(3)(e), which defines who is exempt from being a ‘licensed mortgage originator’:'(E) does not include, with respect to a residential mortgage loan, a person, estate, or trust that provides mortgage financing for the sale of 1 property in any 36-month period, provided that such loan-- (i) is fully amortizing; (ii) is with respect to a sale for which the seller determines in good faith and documents that the buyer has a reasonable ability to repay the loan; (iii) has a fixed rate or an adjustable rate that is adjustable after 5 or more years, subject to reasonable annual and lifetime limitations on interest rate increases; and (iv) meets any other criteria the Federal banking agencies may prescribe.

18 September 2009 | 32 replies
I recentlly did a model on a condo project in Tampa. 40 percent of the adjusted basis was the amount to bring the HOA above water with reserves and such.If the association is toast, walk awayMost countys will not let you uncondo the properties back into apartment buildings.

17 June 2009 | 3 replies
is just an adjustment to your "Transaction One", as I called it.

16 July 2009 | 22 replies
The methods are similar to appraisal, get 3-6 recent (3 months old) sold comparables and 3-6 recent active comparables, adjust the prices based on condition/location/features/etc and determine an AS IS price and a REPAIRED price.

12 September 2009 | 12 replies
Then get the 1st and second mortgage info, verify all his numbers and adjust your contract a bit to the exact numbers.

22 July 2009 | 7 replies
Completion date shall be adjusted for change orders as agreed between Contractor and Client.make sure you get a lawyer to review any contract you put together as your local laws will impact what you can and can not legally bind a person/company to.

27 July 2009 | 34 replies
So, in real terms (real means inflation adjusted, that's, what you can buy with the money), the property is worth only 1.3 times its initial value.The calculation is down as a power function in Excel: Power (1+rate, term) where rate is the appreciation rate (5%) and term is the number of years (30).There's not quite enough information to fully answer you second question, so I'll make a few assumptions.

21 July 2009 | 5 replies
As a landlord who is also an insurance adjuster, may I recommend something.

28 July 2009 | 6 replies
However,per-claim expenditures for medical review and other controls will remainbelow the 1989 level after adjusting for inflation.• The Subcommittee noted that the government had no viablemechanism by which it could recoup overpayments.