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NEED LENDER,95-100% FULL OR STATED DOC'S, CREDIT SCORE 512
22 January 2007 | 1 reply
If this is a primary residence, then perhaps FHA would work at 97%LTV.I'm also not sure why you are looking for full OR stated doc since if your borrower qualifies with full income documentation they will always get a better interest rate and higher LTV.There's just not enough information in your post to warrant a phone call to you but if you want to discuss further, shoot me an e-mail.Ken StampeBank of AmericaMortgage Lending
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Is This Typical of Rehab Financing?
11 January 2007 | 2 replies
My personal residence currently has right at 20% equity in it.
Steve Leka
Amount of $$ to offer??
16 January 2007 | 1 reply
At first this house will be my residence, but will eventually be turned for a profit.
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financing my 1st rental
5 February 2007 | 10 replies
ok, i want to make this short but it might run on.i re-fied my primary residence and took about $100K out.i just offered to buy my first rental and the seller accepted my offer.the offer the seller accepted goes like this.purchase price--$265K20% down--$53Kseller pays $7,950 in closing costs.i want to go with a no doc, conventional investment loan.814/804/787 are my tri-merge credit scores.one loan officer is telling me he can get me 6.5% interest only conventional investor financing with 20% down-no doc's, but i have to come with $2,000 out of pocket.
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How to get started with no money
26 January 2007 | 15 replies
I got one from Countrywide, but mind you it was my primary residence at the time.
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A couple questions about the basics...
26 January 2007 | 13 replies
Perhaps you are referring to the listing Realtor and not someone who you hired to help you find a home.The problem from a conventional financing standpoint is that you have multiple residences on one legal description which makes this a multi-family property beyond the "normal" 1-4 unit residences acceptable to conventional lenders. 2)What is typically done to avoid making a down-payment and/or paying closing costs.If you are asking specific to this property, there probably is no 100% financing option available so you may have to pass on this one.Generally speaking there are many programs for little or no down-payment and you should be talking to a mortgage lender about what you can afford and qualify for prior to looking at homes.As for closing costs, you may qualify for city or county down-payment assistance programs (which are more typically used for closing costs instead of down-payment).
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Greetings from New England
28 January 2007 | 2 replies
After much reading and research, I choose this type of investment for several reasons, not the least of which being it is what I can best afford; vacancies shouldn't be a big problem since its a high rental area; its a low income area, so if I find a sound building, I won't need to spend a lot on improvements to attract tenants (since the tenants wouldn't be able to afford to pay for those rental extras anyway).I'm doing the deal with "no money down-ish" by tapping the equity in my personal residence (HELOC, rate is prime, no margin, 15 year term) for the down payment, and financing the rest at 90% with a conventional 30 yr, 7.75%.
Account Closed
Offer turned down--thoughts please (long)
22 February 2007 | 3 replies
I am working with the agent through whom I bought my residence 12 years ago.
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Renting or Flipping
5 March 2008 | 12 replies
Purchase as a primary residence and move into one of the units and rent the others out.