Not exact matches
Such rates will generally be higher than what home
buyers currently
pay, not only because banks now offer substantial discounts from
posted rates, but also because many
buyers (40 % according to a July 2011 TD Bank report) take mortgages with variable rates, which are lower than fixed rates at least 85 % of the time.
I predict even more sponsored (i.e.
paid) content (
posts, tweets, instagrams) on blogs, content that potentially turns off readers or
buyers.
(1) A credit services organization, its salespersons, agents, and representatives, and independent contractors who sell or attempt to sell the services of a credit services organization may not do any of the following: (a) conduct any business regulated by this chapter without first: (i) securing a certificate of registration from the division; and (ii) unless exempted under Section 13 -21-4,
posting a bond, letter of credit, or certificate of deposit with the division in the amount of $ 100,000; (b) make a false statement, or fail to state a material fact, in connection with an application for registration with the division; (c) charge or receive any money or other valuable consideration prior to full and complete performance of the services the credit services organization has agreed to perform for the
buyer; (d) dispute or challenge, or assist a person in disputing or challenging an entry in a credit report prepared by a consumer reporting agency without a factual basis for believing and obtaining a written statement for each entry from the person stating that that person believes that the entry contains a material error or omission, outdated information, inaccurate information, or unverifiable information; (e) charge or receive any money or other valuable consideration solely for referral of the
buyer to a retail seller who will or may extend credit to the
buyer, if the credit that is or will be extended to the
buyer is upon substantially the same terms as those available to the general public; (f) make, or counsel or advise any
buyer to make, any statement that is untrue or misleading and that is known, or that by the exercise of reasonable care should be known, to be untrue or misleading, to a credit reporting agency or to any person who has extended credit to a
buyer or to whom a
buyer is applying for an extension of credit, with respect to a
buyer's creditworthiness, credit standing, or credit capacity; (g) make or use any untrue or misleading representations in the offer or sale of the services of a credit services organization or engage, directly or indirectly, in any act, practice, or course of business that operates or would operate as fraud or deception upon any person in connection with the offer or sale of the services of a credit services organization; and (h) transact any business as a credit services organization, as defined in Section 13 -21-2, without first having registered with the division by
paying an annual fee set pursuant to Section 63J -1-504 and filing proof that it has obtained a bond or letter of credit as required by Subsection (2).
I like your
post here and recommendations that
buyers should focus decisions on «present cost of money compared to what you are
paying right now» and that
buyers can get a fantatis mortgage rate.
There's the potential
buyer who says she definitely wants the dresser you
posted (even though she hasn't seen it in person), but she just needs you to hold it for a week until she gets
paid on Friday.
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pay increases, psychology of life insurance
buyer, successful life insurance sale, your budget 1 Response
For instance, CoinText enables users to send Bitcoin Cash to any phone without internet via SMS, making it possible for the poorest in the developing world to participate in the digital economy, services on Local Bitcoin Cash matches peer - to - peer bitcoin cash
buyers and sellers, allows people to
post or apply for gigs and
pay or get
paid in Bitcoin Cash, and Tipprbot allows social media users to reward content creators with Bitcoin Cash directly on their usernames without the complexities of wallets,» he continued.
Barry Lebow, a veteran Realtor with Re / Max Ultimate in Toronto, wrote a
post about a Toronto
buyer who
paid $ 2 million for a house in Toronto.
This same Brokerage (in its online presentation) claims that a Seller who chooses to use the MLS «mere
posting» option, should be prepared to
pay a
Buyer's Agent a higher rate of commission than what is the case with what they (said Brokerage) claim will work when a Seller chooses to work with them using their «full service» option!
In my opinion, it is an egregious misrepresentation to suggest or imply to a real estate consumer that a
Buyer who is under contract to a Registrant / REALTOR will
pay more in commission to said «
Buyer Agent» because they might buy a «mere
posting», type, property listing!
Buyers post what they're willing to
pay for a block of time to call a stated destination, and interested long - distance carriers respond.
Should a
buyer sue a seller for damages
post possession relating to an oversight by the seller's
paid - for inspector, the judge will no doubt note that the
buyer did not carry out his / her own due diligence by commissioning his / her own inspection report, thus naively avoiding hiring an inspector to work for his / her financial interests.
Some
postings on REM showed that agents acting FOR (representing) the
buyer, were invited to negotiate with the mere listing Seller, directly, as to how much the Seller would offer to
pay... to the agent procuring the offer, if the co-op was stated as $ 1.00 and deemed not to be acceptable.
Likewise, many of us are scratching our heads in dismay when we read
posts by colleagues who say
Buyers «never» have to
pay commission (it's all over the net on their web sites); to him / her, I say, please speak for yourself, and not for the industry as a whole.
It seems to me that if a Realtor lists a home as mere
posting without specifying a fee the seller is willing to
pay a
buyer's agent, s / he is doing a disservice to his / her fellow agents.
If what the co-op has contracted to
pay, either in an old - fashioned MLS method or on a mere
posting, (if I ever could be convinced to do so), does not meet my
buyer contract, the «in addition» compensation amount, if applicable, is invoiced as per my contracted for amount, to the
buyer's lawyer, who includes the differential sum in his closing out accounting statement and he writes me a trust cheque from his account or instructs the
buyer to bring him a certified check payable to me, on closing,
My
post specifically stated «potential
buyers,» there is a distinct difference between those and
buyers — actual purchasers of property and until such time as one signs an agreement of purchase and sale they've given no such authorization and have contributed nothing toward the people who
pay to upkeep the system.
If the agent is relying on being
paid the co-op fee, and said fee happens to be one - dollar, and that co-op fee is acknowledged as being «whatever is
posted on the MLS,» then that is EXACTLY what he / she will be
paid by the listing company, and that agent will find himself needing to collect from his
Buyer or deciding to work for free.
So over and above the fee you
pay to the marketing company, or for a mere
posting, sellers will likely have to
pay a
buyer's agent to bring a
buyer.
yet Realtors would expect to still get
paid if their
buyer finds a house on their own (IE a mere
posting that wasn't shown or a true FSBO) so the statement the one doing the work will be
paid is false.
The correct method to
post on Craigslist is to get a deal under contract and know roughly what
buyers will
pay for before
posting it.
A
buyer paid $ 3.25 million, though Paulson spent $ 4.3 million for the three - bedroom home in 2006, according to the
Post.
Invest in Marketing for
Buyers: a.
Pay Per Click Advertising b. Craig's List Marketing c.
Post Card Mailing
I have a full
post on this but the important point is that
buyers are much more willing to
pay full list price when houses first hit the market because
buyers know they have a lot of competition from other
buyers the first week and they fear losing the home to other
buyers.
MLS — the creation, managing, entering the data, monthly internet costs Legal forms — the creation, understanding the «legal» forms, cost for them Opinion of Value — comparables and current market conditions Education — never ends when you get you're licence; should always be active with the economy, mortgage rates, new by - laws; the list goes on Time — dealing from the first call, to the appointment, checking into information if need be, confirming all information is correct, and then having the system in place to bring active
buyers to their home Insurance — somebody should have insurance — the Realtor
pays Advertising — cost to advertise — not cheap Office supplies — from the paper, ink, signs and
posts on the front lawn, computers, printers, monthly internet fees... and the list goes on...
In particular the greatest uproar is regarding «mere» listings, (in and out of province) calls on them not returned, sellers being inconvenienced,
buyer reps having to negotiate directly with the owner (before showing) and having to get signatures in place as to how or if
pay is possible... it about doubles the work, but as stated in another
post we are REQUIRED to show them.
And, Robert, please review Kevin's
post as to protection for the Seller, where he indicates an agent would no longer be
paid when working with a
Buyer.
Sellers were also still required to
pay a commission to a
buyer's real estate agent and the deal banned private sellers from including their contact information in their realtor.ca listing, although the
posts could link to a broker's site that published the seller's contact details.