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Real Estate Investing FAQ

by Eric Templeton

A real estate investing FAQ is important for new real estate investors because it usually have lots of important information about investing in real estate. Real estate investing FAQ is usually a list of all the frequently asked questions about real estate investing from finding a property to selling it. There are many strategies in real estate investing.

The first question that most real estate investors ask is where to invest. Finding an area to invest and a good property to invest in is difficult. This question is in all real estate FAQ but the answer is not always clear. If it is that easy to find a good property then everyone will already be rich but they are not so it is hard to find one.

The next most common real estate investing FAQ is usually what to do with a property once you found it. Finding a good property is nothing if you don’t know what to do with that property. A good investor can turn a bad investment into a great and profitable one whereas an inexperienced investor can turn a perfectly good investment into a loss. It is important to know exactly what to do before you submit an offer.

Once you found a home to invest in, the next real estate investing FAQ is how to buy it. To buy a property, you cannot just send in the check, you have to deal with writing an offer, do the inspection, check the title, get the insurance and much more. Each step requires a lot of work and working with many professions such as contractors, realtors, inspectors and even the banks.

Some of the work can be done on paper whereas lots of work has to be done on site. Investors need to be sure that the property is as good an investment as the paperwork says it is. There are many investors that invest in properties that turn out to be money sinkers. By the time they found out it is too late to back out of a deal. A real estate investing FAQ can provide the investors with enough information to avoid such situations.

Some of the best properties are cheap foreclosure homes. However, dealing with homeowners in foreclosure can be difficult since they usually don’t want to sell and are usually not happy sellers. Sometimes dealing with the banks directly is easier so investors prefer to wait till the banks own the properties and buy them as REO or real estate owned properties.

Real estate investing is complicated and requires a lot of research. There are many parties an investor may need to work with such as realtors, inspector, contractors, banks, homeowner, title company, insurance company, and perhaps even the country record office. Reading a real estate FAQ is just the beginning step towards finding a good property to invest in.

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Friday, September 5th, 2008 Investing No Comments

?Information You Can Get from a Home Equity Calculator

by William Blake

With so many banks and lenders online, there are more and more terms and tools popping up all over the internet to help home owners and other would-be borrowers to figure the amounts they are bale to borrow, how much they would owe, etc.

Sadly, many people have not been using the internet long enough to understand how to take full advantage of these tools. This goes especially for a home equity calculator.

If you are interested in knowing how much equity you currently have in your home, you can use a home equity calculator to determine this amount. That can help you when you need to decide the amount of a loan you want to borrow and the amount you will have to pay after your mortgage has been augmented with your home equity loan.

Learning to use a home equity calculator is an essential part of making a good decision about getting a home equity loan. You should do so right away if you are seriously considering take out such a loan. It may not seem like the powerful tool that it is at first, but you will soon come to know just how tremendously a home equity calculator can help you when it comes to your mortgage.

Find Out How Much You’re Worth

Equity that you have in your home which you can borrow against can be calculated by using a home equity calculator. This equation is not extremely complicated. Just subtract however much money you still owe on your mortgage from the present market value of your home. If your credit history is clean, you can borrow up to 85% of the equity you have built in your home.

Some home equity calculators can work out this equation regardless of whether or not you know the current market value of your home. You select from several options to describe your home and the home equity calculator provides you with a reasonable estimate of your home’s value. The size, age, and location of your home will all affect this estimate.

After giving the home equity calculator these details about your home, it will use current market averages to provide you with an estimated market value of your home.

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Friday, September 5th, 2008 Mortgage No Comments

Some Very Practical Credit Card Debt Advice

by William Blake

Even though so called financial experts may sometimes disagree, the fact remains that credit is not something that is inherently bad. The problem is not the credit itself but rather the improper or uncontrolled use of credit. If you find that you have this problem you should not feel like you are the only one. In fact, the country itself has this problem. When national bills cannot be paid, the country extends credit lines that it has with different financial institutions.

Unfortunately, getting credit card debt advice that is beneficial in real world situations is not easy since many people who offer such advice have rather fanatical ideas. Anyone who suggests that people should not have or use credit cards at all simply is not being realistic. Consider the following tips that are designed to be useful in the real world.

Limit Yourself to Just One

About the best credit card debt advice you can get is if you do not already belong to a credit union then join one. Then go into your credit union and ask them for a credit card with a decent sized limit that you can use but is not outrageous.

The credit limit on your credit card will not be raised by a credit union unless they first contact you to give you notice of the increase. Using cash to make purchases, however, is always preferable to raising your credit limit. Credit unions also tend to charge interest rates of ten percent or sometimes even less on credit card accounts. You can expect that this rate will remain stable instead of getting higher and higher.

Emergency Back Up

The idea of buying something now and paying for it later is simply too tempting; everyone will make some kind of foolish purchase on their credit card at least once. It is important, though, that you do not allow this to become a habit. Keep your credit card to be used as an emergency back up plan, not the first line of attack.

Make sure you have the necessary funds to pay for it when you give into the temptation to use your credit card to make a slightly irresponsible purchase. Remember, though, that you do not have a credit card to use that way. Its only for back up.

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Friday, September 5th, 2008 Credit No Comments

The Expert Advisor - Forex Trading Software

by Linda Galla

The Expert Advisor is a sophisticated piece of trading software comprised of a specific set of rules that sits on your trading platform and executes your trades. Essentially, it is a robot.

Most forex traders fail because they succumb to the human emotions of greed and fear. Trading with an Expert Advisor removes these emotions from trading. They are logical.

Under the influence of greed or fear, traders will frequently either stay in a trade in order to grab extra profit when the trade should be closed, or exit a trade prematurely and lose out on profit. The beauty part of trading with an Expert Advisor is that it trades with a plan - not emotion - and does so 24 hours a day during market hours.

The Expert Advisor monitors the market for the trader and will enter and exit trades based upon its predetermined parameters. It is also capable, unlike a human, of monitoring support and resistance levels, indicators, and a host of other factors in multiple timeframes with lightning speed and making instantaneous decisions.

There are many Expert Advisors on the market today, and the prices run from OK to ouch. One must be sure to do some research and get answers to questions such as; are they timeframe or currency specific? Do they follow trends or attempt to predict them? How do they handle risk management? Do they recommend a 2-4% risk or something lower, such as 1-3%? Do they support stop losses? How do they handle take profit levels? Do they ride downturns and only exit trades once they’re in profit?

As you can see, there are many factors to be considered when purchasing an Expert Advisor. Some other things you’ll need to know are what trading platform(s) the EA will run on, whether or not you can run multiple EA’s on one account, and whether or not it can be used with a mini account.

Prior to installing an EA on your trading platform, there’s one more thing to think about. What happens if your computer dies, or the power in your area goes out? Remember that the EA handles your trade, and resides on your computer, but open trades are in the hands of your broker. In this case, you would have an unmanaged open trade.

If you are located in an area that is prone to power failures, you might want to consider opening a VPS (virtual private server) account and loading your trading software on it. That way, your platform will continue to run without you monitoring it, and it can be accessed from any location.

Expert Advisors are definitely helpful tools. Do your homework and conduct some in-depth research before making your purchase and your experience should be a good one.

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Friday, September 5th, 2008 Investing No Comments

Mortgage Approvals Hit All Time Low

by Mark Dawson

The quantity of mortgage applications approved for those seeking to buy a new property in the UK dropped to just 33,000 in July, adding to fears of an imminent recession.

Figures from the Bank of England (BoE) reveal that the number of mortgages approved slumped by 71 per cent year-on-year to an all time low, as lenders choose not to lend to buyers. The credit crunch has forced mortgage lenders to take stock of the money that they are lending and the new BoE figures are seen by many analysts as another blow for the economy.

Adrian Coles of the Building Societies Association told the BBC: “Activity in the housing market continues to be depressed and the approvals figures suggest this is likely to continue for some time. Recent falls in property values have been widely publicised, reducing potential buyers’ confidence and keeping them out of the market.”

The collapse by specialist lenders other than banks and building societies, such as those dealing with poor credit mortgages, is also illustrated by the BoE figures. In July 2007, such lenders gave out 32,000 mortgages for house purchase; in July 2008 they lent just 2,000. Meanwhile, mortgage lenders across the UK approved just 7,000 home loans, compared to 24,000 by the major banks.

The Bank also said that mortgage lending rose by 3.231 billion pounds in July, more than predicted yet only 33 per cent of the increase seen in July 2007.

However, no matter the decline, building societies have seen that their inflow of cash from savers has continued its growth, with savings accounts in building societies having a total of 1.435 billion pounds in July, compared to 723 million pounds 12 months previously.

Just last week, the latest survey from Nationwide found that UK house prices saw an annual double-digit fall for the first time since 1990 - with prices 10.5 per cent lower in August than a year ago. The new BoE figures could increase the pressure on the Bank to cut the base rate of interest in order to help the housing market and the wider economy. However, when the monetary policy committee meets this Thursday (September 4th), it is likely to keep interest rates on hold at five per cent in the interim.

Howard Archer, an economist at Global Insight, told Reuters: “Although we are sure the BoE to cut interest rates before the end of the year, we believe it will not change before November when there is likely to be growing evidence that the deepening economic slowdown and more unemployment are diluting underlying inflationary pressures.”

In August, the BoE chose to maintain the base rate of interest at five per cent for the fifth consecutive month, after a 0.25 per cent cut in April. Its decision meant that consumers’ abilities to handle other spending costs - in areas such as personal loans, credit cards and transport costs - did not come under further pressure.

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Friday, September 5th, 2008 Mortgage No Comments