
23 July 2018 | 11 replies
Some target lists to consider:Absentee Owners with Equity (be aware that in some areas this is getting over-mailed so you might want to mail exclusively to this group)Seniors with Long-Time Ownership (often ready to downsize or transition to assistance)Owners with Low Financial Stability Scores (combine with age, high equity and length of ownership to get extra layer of motivation)

13 July 2018 | 2 replies
Not wanting to go down too low and banking on the fact that the husband believes in the saying "happy wife, happy life" I countered with 150k and luckily, they accepted.

11 November 2018 | 33 replies
@Maria Villamar If you can't get the "Official" notice data, there are other ways to find homeowners who are struggling financially.If you work with a list broker, they can pull owners with Low Financial Stability Scores (FSS).

20 July 2018 | 2 replies
Do you know of any banks that offer checkbook HELOCs that don't require withdrawals, have low annual fees, and have no restrictions around how many financed rental properties are in your name?

28 January 2019 | 17 replies
If I send notes to someone now I ask them how many notes they have bought and what their timing is. 90% of people out there are not real buyers - window shoppers or will throw low ball offers out there.

19 January 2021 | 5 replies
Should I refinance the property to a fixed rate and apply again even though I will no longer enjoy my low interest rate?

16 July 2018 | 39 replies
It has a slight ring of "low income housing" to me.

16 July 2018 | 10 replies
@Jack B. using the numbers that you recently posted (I'm assuming they are the property you are considering, not the sold comp), I would take the $4300 rent, subtract the $500/mo utilities, subtract $800/mo for reserves, ($600 is too low, in my opinion) and $600/mo. minimum cashflow, so I'm left with $2400/mo.

22 July 2018 | 3 replies
Low crime and perfect areas for raising kids.

14 October 2018 | 7 replies
We have such low inventory with virtually no builders building spec homes around here - if the numbers dovetail in with what the market will support, I'm hoping it's a strategy I can repeat, then move into actual spec homes once that model has proven itself.