
23 March 2020 | 6 replies
I can sell any asset from my plans to a non disqualified person.I can buy any asset (with some exceptions) in my plans from non disqualified person.Again, I was not talking about a rollover as I was not looking into bringing more asset into a plan, I just wanted to change title by making a bona fide transaction with exchange of cash for an asset.But if I can't sell from one plan to buy into another, then that would mean that my ROTH 401(k) is a disqualified person for my ROTH IRA.That was my question, as by reading the definition of disqualified person, I was not sure that my ROTH 401(k) was fitting in any of the categories.

5 May 2020 | 29 replies
That means, if the MLS say 3 bedrooms and you later find out the third bedroom was more like a closet and not a bona fide third bedroom, that's on you for not doing due diligence to find out what you were buying.So even if the pictures are nice, there's no guarantee of how recent or accurate those pictures are, nor that there hasn't (or won't be) a change since they were taken.

4 September 2014 | 4 replies
If I were representing a seller, I would release leases until I had a bona fide offer.

14 December 2013 | 36 replies
Then there are those that learn better alone (the BP site is great for them) vs. those that need to learn in a group setting (will get the most benefit from REI clubs, boot camps, and a bona fide subject matter expert, aka gurus).Good listeners can usually identify the basic learning preference of a person fairly easily and quickly:Someone who says "I see what you mean" is probably a visual learner.

31 July 2014 | 17 replies
You should definitely consult with an attorney to be sure, but without an exchange of consideration, it sounds like there might not be a bona fide contract.

15 September 2008 | 22 replies
If the tenant is a bona-fide tenant then find out if they are paying rent, how much and see if it meets what your mortgage payment is.

27 March 2017 | 27 replies
But if your like me and I take it your self a bona fide buyer then you do have the right to do this.I only did it because I paid the ladies back taxs to the toon of 40k.. and then she went dark.. and of course I had a nice equity play there... but had I just had refundable EM up I would have just moved on.

25 March 2017 | 15 replies
Account Closed terrible advice... its one thing to be a bona fide buyer and another being a wholesaler trying to make middle man fee's with no real ability to close.clouding title is a bush league move.. unless you are buying it put up a ton of EM and seller is backing out then you can sue for performance... however probably not many have ever done this..

25 March 2017 | 7 replies
"Buyer offers to beat highest bid by $2000, if the Seller provides the Buyer with a bona fide bid (name blacked out) and the Buyer is given one hour to confirm the bid and confirm he wants to make the higher offer."

24 March 2017 | 4 replies
If he was a bona fide purchaser of the insurance and had no knowledge of anything strange he would most likely be OK.