News
Release #1
Lucky
Few are Buying $1 Million Homes for Just 2%
There's a new "secret" that a lucky few have already found that's enabling them to literally buy houses that
ordinarily sell for around $1 Million or more - but now for just $1,997 or LESS!
There are 3,141 counties in the United States, and each one possesses this exciting new opportunity whereby
anyone with as little as $100 to seldom more than $5,000 can buy homes ordinarily valued from $30,000 to in quite a
number of cases above $5 million! - and for just 1% to rarely above 5% their selling costs!
And the BEST part about this is that you can be located anywhere and still buy any home you want - even if
you're 3,000 miles away or more!
But, you don't have to visit the county you buy the homes in - instead, you can do it all from the comfort and
privacy of your home using just your tiny 'ole mouse!
This is what makes this such a wonderful opportunity, in that you can go online to some select websites, then
pick and choose the properties you want, and then get them for between 1%-5% at most.
No matter what happens you make money!
You basically buy a homeowner's tax lien certificate because he or she wasn't able to pay their property
taxes.
They by law must pay you anywhere from 16% to as much as 50% in interest - and in many cases they must pay you
back within as little as 6 months.
But, if they can't pay you back, YOU own their home free and clear (and for what usually amounts to just 1% of
the house's actually selling value!)
Now, at this point you can either keep the house for yourself, or you can swiftly turn around and resell it (in
any economy, good or bad!) to banks, lenders or individual buyers answering your little classified ad! - and where
you make a killing!
The site that has all the facts as to how you can do this from your laptop or PC is here:
Buying Cheap Houses
But I wish to strongly encourage you to take action and go there as it's rumored that they are going to withdraw
this exciting opportunity as soon as they reach the maximum number of "members" they can handle.
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