Kenneth Bargers Blog

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Open House this Sunday in Hearthstone of Brentwood, Tennessee

134 Hearthstone Manor Circle, Brentwood TN 37027  |  MLS 1183131   Offered at $274,500

FANTASTIC ONE-LEVEL LIVING CONDOMINIUM  |  2,010 s.f. | 3 Bed | 2/1 Bath | 2-Car Garage | End Unit

You have been waiting for a 3 bdrm/office flat on the lake – Here it is – Updated kitchen-granite-loads of cabinets-hardwood flooring-renovated master bath separate shower/soaker tub- lots more – move in condition – Wonderful deck overlooking the lake –  Please visit  http://www.bargers-solutions.com/Open-House-Feature.html  for further images and details.

Kenneth Bargers, REALTOR® | Prudential Woodmont Realty

(615) 512-9836 cellular | (615) 661-7800, x1880 office

kb@bargers-solutions.com email | http://kennethbargers.com blog

www.bargers-solutions.com web | www.woodmontrealty.com web

Kenneth Bargers offers the consumer and client advice and guidance as he steers them through the real estate process for buying, selling, property management, relocation and destination services, lease/rental applications and land acquisition.  Mr. Bargers’ concentrated market is in the Green Hills and Oak Hill areas of Nashville located in Davidson County and Brentwood located in Williamson County. 

May 20, 2010 Posted by | Nashville, open house, real estate | , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment

Wholesalers Flip Houses, Distorting the Market

Real estate investors, who call themselves wholesalers, are snapping up distressed properties, often paying all cash and seeking a discount, preferably from a cash-strapped home owner. 

Then the real estate wholesaler flips the homes — often so fast that he never takes possession of the title. Instead, he signs a contract with the home’s owner and then signs the contract over to a new buyer for an “assigning fee” — the wholesaler’s profit. 

“Wholesaling is finding a bargain for a bargain hunter,” says Michael Jake, a Colorado-based real estate investor. 

Critics of the practice say it makes it harder for lower-income families to take advantage of a down market, not only because good deals are snapped up quickly but also because the practice distorts the market. 

“It makes the bottom [of the market] very frothy and hard to figure out where real value is,” says Andrew Jakabovics, associate director for housing and economics at the Center for American Progress, a Washington, D.C., think tank. 

Source: Christian Science Monitor, Tracey D Samuelson (05/17/2010)

May 20, 2010 Posted by | economy, marketing | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment

   

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