1 October 2014 | 17 replies
Forget to add-- the trust will own the note, this also would add another layer of anonymity to the ownership
18 October 2014 | 4 replies
These are not conventional loans based upon a pile of anonymous loan docs from strangers you never see.
4 January 2006 | 5 replies
I really like the idea of being an anonymous owner by hiring a Property Management Co.
18 April 2007 | 15 replies
Even with the hard money lender, they base their decision to lend partly on my credit, but more on the value of the property and never lend over 70% of ARV.I have transferred property titles into Land Trusts after buying with my LLC for anonymity reasons.
25 November 2007 | 9 replies
The responses should also be completely anonymous, to encourage truthfulness, and you must provide postage paid (or online) replies to get an adequate response.
2 March 2014 | 7 replies
Do you want to be anonymous or will the name be used in marketing?
30 March 2014 | 18 replies
On that note, I'm quite sure it would be anonymous.
20 March 2014 | 4 replies
Best way to protect yourself is to run them like a business, maintain your properties and get an umbrella policy.The LLC and trust will provide some anonymity, but any good lawyer will find you.http://www.nolo.com/legal-encyclopedia/do-living-trusts-protect-assets-creditors.html*Obligatory - this is not legal advice.
17 June 2014 | 14 replies
Another reason for an LLC is to create anonymity as to who actually owns the property.
7 September 2014 | 9 replies
@Pete MossEveryone should be concerned about code enforcement and what I was saying most people will call anonymous.