2 December 2012 | 4 replies
I’m left wondering what’s necessary to trigger USAA foreclosure/the timeline in which USAA is handling their foreclosures?
27 November 2012 | 9 replies
The only ones who will care at first are the landlords who will be forced to accept section 8 type vouchers even if that means they are bankrupting landlords.Eventually the ink will run out of the printers that print our money and that will be the day section 8 and welfare type programs come to an end, and by then, I hope you have a nice dry place for your food and ammo.
7 February 2013 | 5 replies
This is critical, with regard to the 30 days that the bureaus are allowed to investigate the dispute.Second, by using template letters, you vastly enhance the likelihood of triggering a "frivolous or irrelevant" response from the credit bureaus.
29 November 2012 | 12 replies
I agree its something to be aware of but I dont think its that cut and dry.
8 December 2012 | 9 replies
Let's get you started on the ownership path.Pull the trigger already - why-don't-ya :^)
9 December 2012 | 33 replies
Quite opposite to the impression I gave Jon Holdman and Charles Perkins, I was actually kind of hesitant at one point to pull the trigger on this one.
4 October 2013 | 23 replies
The income triggered from the forgiven debt would be ordinary income, right?
4 December 2012 | 2 replies
I been doing my research for almost a year now and during the process of pulling the trigger I contacted a few local lawyers to assist me in creating a joint venture with a contractor I have been working with in Cleveland.
9 December 2012 | 1 reply
Please don’t let this turn into a political debate.Are you more, less or just as likely to pull the trigger on a thin margined flip, a long term hold or as a private lender a high LTV loan to a marginal borrower if you believe taxes will go up in the near and long term?
24 March 2013 | 3 replies
That and bear in mind that each coat has to dry as well as the concrete prep solution.