Address: 6360 S Rainbow Blvd, Las Vegas, NV 89118, USA
Phone: +17027845000
Sunday: Closed
Monday: 8AM–5PM
Tuesday: 8AM–5PM
Wednesday: 8AM–5PM
Thursday: 8AM–5PM
Friday: 8AM–5PM
Saturday: Closed
Dan Rivera
See seem like they are becoming more transactional instead of member based.
Joshua Segal
Convenient location, nice and clean, great customer service at our store, plus many great options for Realtors to be successful!
Ryan Gonzales
A great facility for a great organization.
Robert Rottiers
Excellent customer service.
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How does one define legit?
Maybe they don't like your spelling.
It depends on the contract and if you also had a buyers broker agreement and if the money has been deposited into escrow.
Arnita you need to contact the attorney who handled the divorce. It should be in your divorce decree. If it is in the middle of a loan modification, it should be modified without your name on the new loan. Those usually take awhile depending on the lender. I would contact your attorney, and the lender. This is not legal advise as I am not an attorney. Hope this helps.
You'll need to contact the board directly.
Someone who is the responsible broker for the office.
It all depends on how you contracted. If you feel you were being taken advantage of file a grievance with the GLVAR. You can call me if you need RE assistance
Listing.
Thank you looking forward to joining.
Need a more detailed question.
Just want to know where I file complaint against agent and broker
I have no official capacity to speak for GLVAR, I'm merely a member but I doubt there is an official position at the local level. The marketplace is already rebalancing ownership transferring ownership back to more owner occupied buyers as lenders have created more financing options for owner occupied units. A lot of that has to do with increased profitability in making a loan. When condos sold for $60k in 2010 lenders wouldn't make any money processing a loan so they had no financial incentive. Now at $150k there is a financial incentive. The federal government is what really killed the condo market. First underwriting standards were reduced so a project could have up to 75% investors or more with certain conditions. Then when the market crashed the standards became at least 51% owner occupant to get a loan. Since 90+ percent of the condos had sold to property hungry investors during the boom they could only change hands to other cash investors. I've run out of comment room
There isn't a official market index for rentals that I am aware of however UNLV Lied Institute publishes a quarterly report by Zip code for apartments. If the landlord has access to the Association of Realtor's multiple listing service they can check rents on comparable properties to determine what the market is.
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