Twice as nice (Real Estate Appraisal)
October 27, 2007 on 8:00 am | In Real Estate Appraisal | No CommentsTwice as nice
Austin American-Statesman – She bought her first in 1979 while pursuing a degree in real estate appraisal in College Station. Upon moving to Austin, she sold that property, and now she and Polson also own a duplex in Oak Hill, the rent on which more than covers that mortgage
Selling without a Realtor? An attorney (Real Estate Appraisal) fills out your team
October 26, 2007 on 9:02 am | In Real Estate Appraisal | No CommentsSelling without a Realtor? An attorney fills out your team
Lowell Sun – While an independent appraisal will help to set an accurate asking price, a pre-sale home inspection will identify potential At every real estate seminar I’ve given or attended, someone in the audience asks why they need an attorney. The cocky, would
Do your homework before foreclosure auction
Orlando Sentinel – an appraisal, which usually costs about $350. Even more important, Roberts said, is deciding ahead of time the maximum amount you’re willing to pay for a certain home and sticking to it. You can sign a “buyer broker” agreement with a real-estate
MP urges feds to abandon real-estate sale (Real Estate Appraisal)
October 26, 2007 on 9:01 am | In Real Estate Appraisal | No CommentsMP urges feds to abandon real-estate sale
CNEWS – We had them appraised in January by an independent appraiser and that appraisal came in at $1.15 billion,” said Fortier by brothers Amin and Mansoor Lalji – one of the richest families in Canada – Larco Investments has 30 years in the real-estate
Fundamentals of Real Estate Appraisal (Fundamentals of (Real Estate Appraisal) Real Estate Appraisal)
October 25, 2007 on 10:00 am | In Real Estate Appraisal | No Comments
Fundamentals of Real Estate Appraisal (Fundamentals of Real Estate Appraisal) Using an effective blend of theory and practice, this best selling textbook provides a strong foundation for understanding today’s ever changing appraisal marketplace.
Customer Review: It’s a toughie.
This is the text book that was assigned to my class, and I am taking an at-home course. I don’t know if these guys are covering everything or not, but I can tell you this: they sure don’t know how to write clearly. Sentences are long-winded and convoluted. I read each sentence over and over just trying to figure it out. I am taking notes by re-writing every paragraph. Appraisal school is difficult enough without having to decipher and translate the textbook into plain English. Today’s example:
“The amount of the expected annual ‘effective gross income’ from the property, estimated by subtracting aniticipated vacancy and collection losses from potential gross income”.
I translated that to:
“Effective Gross income equals potential gross income minus (anticipated vacancy + collection losses).”
It makes for very tedious studying.
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