14 March 2016 | 11 replies
And your mentor will be sort of like your safety net to prevent you from making a lot of mistakes along the way.
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18 September 2019 | 29 replies
There are multiple factors now that would prevent you from building even a patio in Bellevue.
14 March 2016 | 2 replies
It also allows us to only pay interest on the money we actually need versus getting a mortgage up front and holding onto the money.Concerns:I want to protect his position as much as possible without putting a lean on this property that would prevent me from getting the HELOC I need.Possible Proposal:Assuming he requires this be secure, I can put the lean on another property or properties to protect his position.
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15 March 2016 | 3 replies
@Ryan Moore, the regulation I believe they are referring to is TRID and I don't believe TRID (TILA RESPA Intergrated Disclosure Rule) prevents them from putting the security deposits and pro-rated rents on the CD (Closing Disclosure), I think the problem is they don't want to put them in because they are technically transferring outside of the loan (i.e. meaning it is not a condition of financing).
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6 May 2016 | 25 replies
As I alluded to in the podcast, I don't want to foreclose and do everything I can to prevent it -- not letting them get too far behind, working with them to restructure the note, forgiving some penalties, cash for keys, etc.And you're right -- the early 80s was a great time to buy with owner financing.
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15 April 2016 | 12 replies
Many lenders would also note, however, that there is nothing that would prevent the Land Trust trustee from changing trustees or would prevent the Land Trust beneficiaries from changing.
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15 April 2016 | 2 replies
Matthew,What are you being told the issue is that is preventing the refinance?
15 April 2016 | 0 replies
Well i am i die-hard investor in stock market and want to invest in stock-market thoroughly and continuously but according to the latest census and latest happenings across the globe i am not in state to invest in sto...
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18 April 2016 | 20 replies
Yes, you can evict them, now eviction cost money and the tenant can just damage your property when they get evicted.There are other factors that prevent investors to invest in those areas unless they know that the area will be better area in the future.
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18 April 2016 | 2 replies
If we are to use a compounded value for annual return, it would be the 7.67% ROI because this will take into account the return of principal and prevent "double counting" of the principal from the original 200,000 note purchases and the annual purchase of new notes with cash flow.Future Value: 200,000 * (1.0767)^5 = $289,403Future Cash Flow (safe withdraw rate) = $289,403 * .0767 = $22,197ConclusionBased on this analysis, cash flow for the note investment would be higher by $8,121 annually after 5 years.Question Do you think this analysis was done correctly?