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19 September 2019 | 1 reply
I have googled DIY ways to fade the mark that seem fairly simple and not terribly time consuming.
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19 September 2019 | 2 replies
Here is the link: https://www.epa.gov/lead/protect-your-family-lead-your-homeSome documents you should look for if an offer is submitted to you via a licensed agent:-Consumer guide to agency relationship.
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22 September 2019 | 3 replies
@Jamila Thompson Reading your bio it seem to me you have much more to offer then most newbies...the background in civil engineering is for sure a great start...the other asset you can offer is obviously your time and 'just out of college' energy...I would start by offering to go to view properties for investors you would like to work with...this is one of the most time consuming parts and there will be always more properties an investor would like to see then would possible physically...you could probably accompany them for few times to get them to explain their criteria and then have them send to you places they would like you to see...or being proactive about it and find for them properties that match their criteria.
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17 October 2019 | 60 replies
Consume a lot of data and speak to a lot of folks before making a decision.
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19 September 2019 | 1 reply
I re-grouted the entire second floor (kitchen/living/dining area) which ended up being very time consuming and labor-intensive.
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20 September 2019 | 3 replies
If it's bad debt (such as consumer credit card), I'd suggest you work on reducing that bad debt first.
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20 September 2019 | 2 replies
Business loans in the name of your business typically do not report to TransUnion, Equifax, and Experian on the consumer side.
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17 November 2019 | 9 replies
I'm just at the beginning of my learning and have barely scratched the surface of consuming the wealth of information that Bigger Pockets has to offer.My original thought was to purchase houses for rental and hire a property management company to make that mostly passive.
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21 November 2019 | 21 replies
When the sellers are proactively pressuring you to do that, that's another thing and it means everyone knows this property is worth less than what you are willing to pay.If someone with a good DTI is putting 20% down and the appraisal comes in say 3% or 2% short, I can restructure the loan such that their down payment remains unchanged but they take on PMI, often times I'll go all the way down to the next 5% increment so they keep cash in their pocket while I'm at it (IE: consumer 'feels' they are putting 20% down based on sales price, underwriter views it as being 'really' 17% down due to appraisal, well screw that 15% down gets the same PMI rate and lets them keep money in their pocket, so we're doing that not 17%).
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16 November 2019 | 6 replies
Scale is amazing, with a team, but time consuming when you're going at it by yourself and you dont want to stretch yourself too thin.