
26 May 2019 | 30 replies
Even if they eventually fail it is a lot of disruption.

11 May 2019 | 8 replies
You can be 100% right and you can take all the proper steps for eviction, but fail to have a signature on a form or put the wrong dates in or whatever.

15 June 2019 | 62 replies
syndicators are not personally guaranteeing your returns.. and yes syndicated deals fail all the time with total loss of capital many of those deals are the deals the new syndicators are picking up.. the bones of bad ones.sponsor is critical. they fail form1. inept management'2. big employer left town to many vacancies and because these deals to get returns.3. bad buy out of the gate.4. malfeasance in management

16 June 2019 | 6 replies
They are either full of vultures or newbs spreading rumors that will cause more harm than help.Don't give up, every "fail" is closer to a win.

11 May 2019 | 4 replies
People get bad tenants because they don't know how to screen or they fail to screen.
12 May 2019 | 41 replies
The commercial listing broker representing the developer, institution seller,etc. remembers the (deal that didn't HAPPEN) where legal expenses, time, and effort was wasted on a failed attempt at a sale.

11 May 2019 | 14 replies
Below is the language in the contractSeller's Failure to Comply or Breach: If Seller fails to materially comply with any of Seller's obligations under this Paragraph8 or Seller materially breaches this Contract, and Buyer elects to terminate this Contract as a result of such failure or breach, then the Earnest Money Deposit and the Due Diligence Fee shall be refunded to Buyer and Seller shall reimburse to Buyer the reasonablecosts actually incurred by Buyer in connection with Buyer's Due Diligence without affecting any other remedies.

13 May 2019 | 6 replies
The Last thing someone facing foreclosure needs is someone who can’t actually buy tying up their property for a month or so, Hoping to flip it to an unknown buyer.....when you fail, they now have no time to sell it to a real buyer before foreclosure.

22 May 2019 | 19 replies
Some fail, some don't.My model is 3/2 SF, single story in GREAT school districts where ppl want to live.

17 May 2019 | 1 reply
87% of real estate agents fail out of the industry altogether, which is right in line with the small business failure rate of 90%.Most small businesses do not turn a profit in their first 2 years in business, and barely eek out a profit in year 3.Being an agent, like any small business requires you to spend capital in order to build the business, regardless of whether revenue is coming in or not.The median income for a full time agent is right around $50,000 per year.I say those things to help set expectations.