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7 February 2012 | 1 reply
Hey Rob, have you ever used any program before to compare to?
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13 February 2012 | 7 replies
JasonFirst thing you should learn from this is get some kind of control.
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14 February 2012 | 4 replies
Many loan programs will require you to be in the chain of title and some will require you to have owned the property for a period of time.
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18 September 2012 | 17 replies
From that last poster's website link:"We only sell professional do it yourself pest control products."
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16 April 2012 | 29 replies
ARC was 31,000(we put about 10k in and got 5k back from energy program here in maine)gross rents 1,382owned free and clear, no financinglousy neighborhood, though it really hasn't been that bad, it's been slightly taskier than most (tenants not getting along, a couple of minor police visits, etc..)
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14 February 2012 | 24 replies
Don't know about Capstone, but these discuss large investments in REO-to-Rent programs by OakTree and GI Partners, large pvt equity funds.
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10 February 2012 | 7 replies
If they will just be investing passively one time and they don't need checkbook control they can get by with very low fees with IRA Services.
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16 February 2012 | 11 replies
If through a listing broker it will depend on what the listing broker entered on the MLS and MLS rules.In Georgia for instance on FMLS if as a broker you screw up and enter commission wrong,mistake things etc. you can be on the hook for the commission or lose access to the MLS.MLS's are sometimes controlled by REALTOR associations and other times are private entities that are non-profits or for-profit organizations.Also the brokers/agents involved it would matter if they were REALTORS or not.Generally your state's real estate commission does not handle commission disputes.They only care about license laws.The agent can argue procuring cause with the other agent but it should not stop your sale.Simply you would close and get your proceeds and the commission in question would be froze until a solution was given and signed in writing or a court order.There are so many variables to this and it is state specific.Procuring cause is a chain of events leading up to a sale of a property.If the chain is broken generally the broker/agents is not due a commission.The moral of the whole story is the buyers agent needs to learn how to protect themselves in the future.I am not going to court to get my agents commission when I only charge them a 300 flat fee as a broker.No legal advice
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10 February 2012 | 1 reply
If you are owner financing some or all of the property then the structure and valuation is different than a traditional sale.Also you won't be able to control all the sales in the neighborhood or what they go for.It is not like you own a subdivision and all the houses you built in it.4.You can do 4 but you waste time.Interest rates can rise and values can fall and you get a worse evaluation then you have now.5.
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17 October 2012 | 55 replies
To me the solution is simple: Buy up all the foreclosures and other cheap properties and control the market.