
27 June 2015 | 6 replies
Monday, I have a meeting with a local attorney(did not know finding an attorney alone who is willing to close creative financing was going to be MASSIVE WORK) and due to the less than limited amount of attorneys who are not intimidated with this allows me to go to them with a bit more knowledge in knowing what needs to happen.

15 March 2015 | 8 replies
Wholesalers do have to put in massive amounts of work and effort though, to find those deals.
30 November 2014 | 11 replies
Not sure I would be investing in RE there, well... maybe farm land in India and stock in Deere to take advantage of the growing cane market / technology (assuming the need for massive sugar demand to produce building materials).To the question, for me... hands down Option B.

6 October 2014 | 8 replies
(I bought mine first, then Warren Buffet bought his, just for the record.)
25 January 2015 | 16 replies
I know you want to help your Dad, but 50% of profits for the use of cash is the equivalent of a massive interest rate.

27 January 2015 | 7 replies
The only way that thing wins if its in a market with massive appreciation, which isn't going to be the case in rural area.

4 July 2009 | 12 replies
Massive down payments to create the perception of an artificial equity position or the "down payment" going into a reserve account held by the lender backed by an insurance policy that would facilitate X number of payments on the buyer's behalf in the event of job loss, disability, etc.?

27 March 2019 | 20 replies
In that case, no real "set up" is necessary.However, you'd face some massive personal liability issues if you did that.Forming a corporation or a limited liability company would probably be the first step to protect your assets from your business' liabilities.

1 July 2024 | 10 replies
There is a MASSIVE difference.