
25 November 2018 | 11 replies
Proper justification is whatever is spelled out in the contract - normally contingencies for home inspection and ability to obtain a mortgage.Following that, we go through appraisal, underwriting, mortgage commitment, a final walk through and then closing.The negotiations take place in two parts of the process.

28 November 2018 | 13 replies
As you may already know, property management and tenant placement is the key to success in your investment, so be careful if buying turnkey will commit you to using their own PM.

26 November 2018 | 8 replies
He is getting out this year, and her commitment is up Sept of 2020 - this is their last assignment and they are riding out their time until they separate and move.

27 November 2018 | 13 replies
My wife and I are committed to purchasing at least one buy and hold investment property in 2019.

27 November 2018 | 3 replies
So you're going to commit bank fraud, I doubt you'll want to get caught, it's more expensive than a ticketthis type of approach is exactly why the VA loan is a trap, it makes people go crazy for an average bank product and a LOUSY investment product.

28 November 2018 | 11 replies
This sounds fun and exciting, but the time commitment really kills it for me.Forced appreciation through improved operationsI've heard many success stories from investors that have generated great returns by finding a commercial multi-family property that's underperforming and/or mismanaged.

28 November 2018 | 4 replies
They provide a teaser for what the property can churn upon resale, but it is imperative that one does all the DD upfront before committing to one of their properties.

2 December 2018 | 3 replies
Over two months of them getting their commitment, appraisal was good, inspection good, municiple and title search all set... they decide to accept a job offer 1000 miles away and back out of the deal.

3 December 2018 | 1 reply
Hi LaTara,PPMs are quite expensive, so you typically don't want to create one until you have investors (at least verbal commitments) and a deal under contract (or at least identified).

9 December 2018 | 15 replies
@Justin Nagy - Sure, if you want to commit fraud and have the IRS on your back.