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Results (1,209)
Dennis Tierney Do you disclose a haunting?
16 April 2019 | 87 replies
give me your credit card info and I will remove the spirits through advance rituals and arcane spiritual extraction ceremonysplease be swift!
John Cohen Closed on a 48 Unit Multifamily - First Syndication
12 February 2017 | 102 replies
@Gary Swift I appreciate it!
Justin Frye what should i do about a tenant who's previously had a eviction?
17 February 2017 | 25 replies
Be friendly, fair, firm, flexible (when the situation warrants), fast (swift to make repairs, swift to enforce the terms of the lease agreement).
Andrea Sleek Lender One LLC - anyone have experience with them / Ohio company
26 December 2023 | 6 replies
There isn't anything on the BBB about them.Rates and terms seem really good - swift process,  just leery about a company I've not used or heard of before.Thanks for any input if anyone has any.
Najat F Kessler Just closed on My first multifamily 3 units with tenants
3 March 2019 | 9 replies
When I called her today to introduce myself as the new owner, she swiftly paid me the March rent.
Jorge Abreu RECESSION PERFORMANCE: STOCK MARKET VS. MULTIFAMILY REAL ESTATE
30 December 2022 | 2 replies
And with short-term leases, owners can swiftly react to any economic shifts.
Todd G. Your Input on Creative Financing References
16 September 2013 | 16 replies
On the one hand we have buyers of new (or replacement) houses who must have loans in order to buy the home they want.In qualifying for the new homes, they must somehow dispose of their old houses.When money is "tight", the sale market slows down, placing both the builders (and their lenders) and the buyers (who must first sell their existing residences in order to qualify for a loan) into a quandary.At the same time, a portion of the market (investor/speculators) willing to absorb the surplus houses is prevented from doing so because of the same shortage of mortgage funding.The solution lies in creative financing techniques.Read on.The following pages address themselves to this parallel dilemma of the market, the builders, the lenders, the buyers, the sellers, investors and speculators.For the agile investor, CommonWealth Letters have a slogan: "THE GOOD NEWS IS THAT THERE IS BAD NEWS".In so many words, what that means is that in tough times, when credit has dried up the markets, only those who have cultivated buying, selling, fixing, management, negotiating, and financing skills survive and prosper, but, when we have prosperity in the United States, it is possible for ANYONE to succeed.Our markets are so vast, our citizens so affluent, our institutions so liberal, that practically every form of commercial activity has a theoretical and statistical chance to succeed.The problem with that scenario is that good times cause millions of would-be entrepreneurs to enter the market place.Success becomes a very competitive venture in which those with true ability are virtually in-distinguishable from those without the skills and knowledge normally required as a prerequisite to prosperity.Thus, our endeavors receive only average returns even though we might be able to contribute above average talent, energy, drive, capital, and imagination.One of the principal reasons for this is that venture capital abounds in good times.Lenders woo the untried, unskilled, untalented in an effort to place the ever increasing funds deposited within their coffers.Interest rates fall as money chases borrowers.The costs of doing business are reduced correspondingly as the cost of money falls, (then they are raised again as the costs of labor and materials escalate to meet increased demand).The ebb and flow of money and production instills a cyclical rhythm into the economy; and just as Winter follows Summer, so must hard times follow the good.In hard times, the reverse of the above holds true.Slowing economic activity causes businesses to retrench.The faint of heart drop out, others cut back on costs, materials, and labor.They slow down their payments to the banks.They with-draw surplus funds to meet current expenses.Bankers, seeing their reserves beginning to diminish, are faced with increasing loan demand from borrowers who foresee less and less certain profits with which to repay them.Interest rates are increased to meet market demand for money.Loan terms are stiffened to discount increasing risks.Money becomes tighter and tighter.Now many of us who have been waiting on the sidelines begin to see opportunities.Those builders who need buyers, those buyers who need new homes, those speculators who are stretched thin with negative cash flows; throngs of those who knew how to prosper during times of business expansion become listless and drift during periods of contraction.Our opportunity derives its strength and vitality from our being able to function in the market place without reliance on any financial institutions.Our competitors, who in prosperity were able to divert many opportunities to themselves, swiftly find themselves "on the ropes" when their lines of credit are withdrawn, because the key to their vigor was easy credit.Without readily available financing, they become ineffective.Phrased another way, those who choose to depend solely upon institutional financing will always find themselves trying to make a profit in a competitive market situation.They will be "in-phase" with millions of others, condemned to mediocre success, dependent upon good times to afford them enough of a living to be able to weather the slow periods.On the other hand, THOSE OF US WHO LEARN HOW TO PROSPER DURING HARD TIMES, WITHOUT THE HELP OF THE BANKERS, WILL BE ABLE TO OPERATE IN A NON-COMPETITIVE, PROFITABLE ENVIRONMENT.
Rich Weese Follow up to WHY DO WE INVEST with some retirement #'s
3 December 2013 | 27 replies
.$100 entertainment$400 insurances and medicine (now on medicare with the extras included)$30 property taxes (remember this is personal property so taxes are very low)$12 mobile home annual registration$9 pickle ball indoor club$150 fuel (I just bought a 1990 Suzuki's Swift on craigslist for $2200 – 44 mpg)$35 vehicle registrations in South Dakota(only counting two of five vehicles)$2395 (this is based on two people, two vehicles etc.)
Mindy Jensen How many pages is your lease?
18 November 2023 | 42 replies
All three stayed until the sheriff came and the evictions were swift, completed in less than one month.
Ben Martin Newbie from San Francisco
2 January 2019 | 6 replies
I used to live in San Diego, so I've seen the prices increase rapidly throughout CA seemingly without rhyme or reason.I also have a software background and have explored the idea of creating an app, but I'd have to brush up on Android and I don't even know any Swift yet.