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An exclusive, members-only opportunity to learn how to build wealth and financial independence through multifamily real estate investments.
I started my business by using banks, savings, credit cards, lines of credit, creative techniques with sellers (like land contracts or lease/options), and partners. Just think, if I would have used a private lender on the above deal, I could have bought, fixed & sold the house and pocketed $20,000 by the time I got to the closing table with the bank. Let’s look at another major benefit of having private lenders. As my use of private lenders increased, I learned that some of them didn’t need monthly payments
Unlike many other companies you will come across, Charter Financial only makes money purchasing notes, not selling expensive training programs. Charter Financial has created an excellent opportunity for individuals to add note broker training by becoming a member of the company. The average fee is $3,000+ and fees can range between $1,000 – $25,000+ and the great thing is that you determine your fee on each and every transaction. No one will ever call you asking you to buy anything else Each Membership comes with a Free Note Website Hosting fee starts at $15 per month – Domain name not included – Cancel any time Click Here to see Sample Websites SIGN UP TODAY FOR ONLY $24.95 As soon as you sign up to become a member you will receive instant online access to all the training through Charter Financials Member Only Website.
With the COVID-19 outbreak and subsequent stock market plunge, the first quarter of 2019 delivered a shock to the United States as citizens hunkered down at home and companies grappled to adjust and weather it out. The National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Opportunity Index found that just 63.2% of new and existing homes sold nationwide between the beginning of October and the end of December were affordable to families earning the U. S. median income of $75,500. Upscale, amenity-rich communities abound, while new supply in workforce and affordable rentals is sparse, despite crushing demand. The National Low Income Housing Coalition in its 2019 Out of Reach report found just 4 million rental homes are affordable and available to the nation’s 11 million extremely low-income renter households whose incomes are less than the poverty rate or 30% of their area median income.
The historic $2 trillion federal package passed the House of Representatives on Friday by voice vote, with President Donald Trump signing the 880-page rescue bill just hours later. Multifamily industry groups applauded the small business loans, payments to consumers, HUD-related benefits, mortgage forbearance and tax benefits. The National Multifamily Housing Council and the National Apartment Association, for example, want to see: direct housing assistance outside the package on a sustained basis, similar to FEMA disaster relief; a clarification that eviction relief is for those financially affected by the coronavirus and not for all renters; an extension of forbearance to all financial instruments, not just federally backed loans; and a reconciling of the gap between the 90 days of mortgage forbearance and the 120-day eviction moratorium after which owners must wait three months to begin an eviction. The federal package includes specific measures to address soaring jobless claims, which skyrocketed to a record of almost 3.3 million, according to the U. S. Department of Labor’s latest report.