Foreclosure Property please contact
Sale of Foreclosure and Surplus Property --- Certificate Prices Increase Jan. 2 Keyword Search Required for .PDF, click on the Adobe Acrobat Reader Link, if not already loaded. Citizens | Students | Contractors and Consultants Tax Foreclosed and Surplus Properties Lake Worth Leases | Quick Reference | Tax Foreclosed & Surplus Properties The City of Fort Worth Department of Engineering Real Property Services Division maintains an inventory of all tax-foreclosed property received from the monthly Tarrant County Constable's Sale. What is a tax-foreclosed property? Any property within the City limits of Fort Worth that is not sold at the Constable's Sale is "struck off" to the City of Fort Worth. The City of Fort Worth is the Trustee for all the other taxing entities such as: w Fort Worth Independent School District; w Tarrant County College; w Tarrant County Hospital District and etc. Except for very narrow exceptions, Texas State Law Requires that all tax-foreclosure properties be sold through the sealed bid process. To view the current Sealed Bid list please see below under section "Current Info". Thank you for participating in our Sealed Bid Sale. The Tax Resale Deed or Quitclaim Deed to these properties will contain no warranties of any kind. The City of Fort Worth will not provide a Title Policy. The foreclosures properties are sold " as is " and " with all faults " and the City has no responsibility for their condition. The City requires bidders to certify that they have no outstanding City of Fort Worth judgments, liens or tax delinquencies and that they are not City of Fort Worth employees. Sale of Tax Foreclosure and Surplus Property Forms w Sale of Tax Foreclosure and Surplus Property Bid Form w Bid Steps List Current Info w View Sealed Bid sale list for October 27, 2005 w Inventory of all tax-foreclosed property (PDF, 237Kb, 12/2005) w High Bid Results October 27, 2005 July 28, 2005 April 28, 2005 January 27, 2005 October 28, 2004 July 29, 2004 April 29, 2004 January 29, 2004 Have a Question? w Sealed Bid Sale Frequently Asked Questions w Fill out the Feedback Form For more information or questions about Tax Foreclosure Property please contact us at: Real Property Services Division Telephone 817-392-8362 Postal Address 900 Monroe Street, Suite 302 Fort Worth, TX 76102 Email DoeTaxProperties@fortworthgov.org Updated: 12/28/05 Engineering Home | Engineering News | Engineering Services | CO-OP Education | Engineering Employment Comments or Questions about this website? Email Us or call us at 817-392-7941
Real Estate Broker Becoming
How to Become a Real Estate Broker - eHow.com Clear Instructions on How To Do (just about) Everything Web eHow.com Home Finance & Business Center Real Estate How to Become a Real Estate Broker Becoming a real estate broker requires a great deal of time, study and effort, but the rewards can be worth it. Steps: 1. Have your head examined. 2. Contact your state's Department of Real Estate. 3. Request a copy of the requirements needed to become a broker. 4. Take required classes. 5. Get real estate business experience (typically as a salesperson or in a position in a related field, such as title or escrow or property management) if required. 6. File necessary paperwork. 7. Pay required fees. 8. Contact a real estate school that specializes in courses for taking the real estate broker's exam. Check the yellow pages under "Real Estate - Schools." Studying and class work can typically be done at home. 9. Contact a local college or university that offers broker exam preparatory classes. These classes will require class attendance. 10. Study! 11. Pass the exam. 12. Pay any additional fees. 13. Provide any additional information. 14. Get your license. 15. Go into business. 16. Lose your mind. Tips: Many states have experience requirements for being in the real estate business. Most states have course requirements that you must meet. These can be fulfilled either through college or real estate school courses. Most states have no limit on the number of times a person can take the test. Warnings: The information contained in the test will not prepare you for the business of being a real estate broker. The exam strictly tests your ability to memorize certain real estate information. Please Share Your Tips with Us More Resources: Contribute to eHow: Write an eHow Article Suggest a Topic Give Us Feedback on This Article Related eHows: Read a Textbook Prepare for Class Choose a Financial Aid Program Choose a Graduate School Things You'll Need: pens electronic personal organizers notebooks personal organizers highlighter pens Project Details: Skill Advisory: Moderately challenging New! -- Related eHows: Read a Textbook Prepare for Class Choose a Financial Aid Program Choose a Graduate School Check out Thousands of How-To Solutions in eHow's Centers Automotive Careers & Education Computers & Home Electronics Family & Relationships Finance & Business Food & Entertaining Health Hobbies & Games Holidays & Traditions Home & Garden Personal Care & Style Pets Sports & Fitness Travel How to: --? Web eHow.com Home | Site Map | About Us | How To Books | Link to eHow Subscribe to the eHow of the Day Mailing List : Have the eHow of the Day appear on your My Yahoo! Page: Add the eHow of the Day to your RSS reader: © 1999-2005 eHow, Inc. How things get done. Use of this web site constitutes acceptance of the eHow Terms of Use and Privacy .
Real Estate Loan
Mortgage Mag Main Page Mortgage Mag Main Page MBA Orlando Convention! New Clips! - View the daily clips, contact us. 1.0 State Information Loans, Lenders, Jobs, Associations 2.1 Loan Leads Lead Generation, Telemarketing 2.3 Software Registry Software, Systems, Technology 2.7 Free Loan Search Engine Find a Home for a Loan 4.1 Secondary Marketing Loan Securities, Pipeline, Software 5.0 Industry News Press Releases, Events 5.1 Market Commentary Rates, Events, Calendar 5.3 MortgageMag LIVE! Multimedia, Interviews, Audio, Video 6.1 Net Branching Branching, Associative, Partnerships 6.2 LOX Loan Officer Exchange Job Seekers & Employers 6.3 Job Listings Jobs, Resume Postings and Services 6.4 Recruiter Registry Mortgage, Banking, Finance 7.0 Consulting Registry Mortgage Banking, Finance 8.0 Mortgage Forums Jobs, Branching, IT 11.1 Appraisal Registry Find an Appraiser, Services 17.0 Administration Advertise , FREE LINK! , Search , Help Friday Update w/ Aaron Freedman Rob Hain 12/16/2005 Friday Update w/ Aaron Freedman Rob Hain 12/9/2005 Friday Update w/ Aaron Freedman Rob Hain 12/2/2005 Tuesday Market Update Rob Hain 11/29/2005 Monday Market Update Rob Hain 11/28/2005 MortgageMag Live Interviews Impac Mortgage Group of Companies Bill Ashmore 12/15/2005 Quality Control in Leads Seth Goldstein 12/13/2005 More Than Just Mortgages Roger Dunker 11/29/2005 The Freedman Report Aaron Freedman 11/22/2005 Old School Recruiting Rob Huxtable 10/25/2005 Market News MortgageMag will be at the MBA Orlando Convention! - 10/04/2005 Mortgage Application Volume Down In Latest Survey - 12/21/2005 President Expected to Sign TRIA Legislation - 12/21/2005 Pros See No Doom, Gloom in Slowdown - 12/19/2005 Mortgage Technology SupportTrac and TracTalk Provide Del Mar Database Customers with Online Support Tools - 12/21/2005 Digital Map Products Partners with Aerials Express - 12/17/2005 SupportTrac and TracTalk Provide Del Mar Database Customers with Online Support Tools - 12/17/2005 Swiftpro recruitment software is pleased to announce the launch of two new channel partner and reseller schemes. - 12/17/2005 Fannie Mae Fannie Mae Updates 12/16/2005 - 12/17/2005 Fannie Mae Alerts - 12/12/2005 Fannie Mae Alerts - 11/15/2005 Fannie Mae Updates 11-7-2005 - 11/07/2005 Freddie Mac Freddie Mac Updates 12/16/2005 - 12/17/2005 Freddie Mac Updates 12/12/2006 - 12/12/2005 Freddie Mac Alerts - 11/15/2005 Freddie Mac Updates - 10/28/2005 Mortgage Mag Main Page Main Index 1. Loans 2. Loan Originations 3. Loan Processing 4. Mortgage Banking 5. News/Commentary 6. Jobs & Resumes 7. Consulting Registry 8. Forums/Groups 10. Real Estate 11. Property Services 12. Finance 13. Banking 14. Credit Services 15. Legal Services 16. IT/Systems 17. Administrative 18. Related Web sites 1. Loan Center 1.1 Loans by State 1.2 Lenders by State 1.3 Commercial 1.4 Note Sales 2. Loan Originations 2.1 Loan Leads 2.2 Mortgage Marketing 2.3 Lending Software 2.4 Training/Education 2.5 Mortgage Exam 2.6 Licensing 2.7 LoanSearch Engine 2.8 Advertise/Marketing 2.9 Associations 3. Loan Processing 3.1 Processing 3.2 Underwriting 3.3 Closing 3.4 Document Services 3.5 Title Services 3.6 Mortgage Services 4. Mortgage Banking 4.1 Wholesale 4.2 Correspondent 4.3 Loan Processing 4.4 Secondary Markets 4.5 Portfolio Services 4.6 Loan Administration 4.7 International 4.8 Support Services a. Warehouse Loans b. Consultants c. Software d. Govenrment 4.9 Industry Info 5. News/Information 5.1 Market Audio 5.2 Daily News 5.3 MortgageMag Live! 5.4 Lending Forums 5.5 Convention Info 5.6 PR Posting 6. Jobs & Resumes 6.1 Branching [Net] 6.2 Loan Off Exch-LOX 6.3 Jobs - Search/Post 6.4 Recruiter Database 6.5 Job Forums 6.6 Resume Search 6.7 Resume Resources 7. Consulting Registry 8. Forums/Groups 8.1 Market Commentary 8.2 Loan Requests 8.3 Commercial Loans 8.4 Broker Licensing 8.5 Loan Leads 8.6 Mortgage Banking 8.7 Software/Technology 8.8 Branching [Net] 8.9 Employment 10. Real Estate 10.1 Agents 10.2 Resources 10.3 Commercial 10.4 Rental/Apartments 10.5 Construction 11. Property Services 11.1 Appraisal Registry 11.2 Flood Services 11.3 Property Services 11.4 Insurance 11.5 Environmental 11.6 Trust Management 11.7 Mortgage Services 11.8 Government Links 12. Finance 13. Banking 14. Credit Services 15. Legal Services 15.1 Attorneys 15.2 Accounting & Tax 16. IT/Systems 16.1 Video Services 16.2 Video Production 16.3 Webcasting 16.4 Audio 16.5 Multi-Media 16.6 Graphics 16.7 Internet Services 16.8 Software 17. Administrative 17.1 Contact 17.2 Advertising 17.3 Free Listings 17.4 News Posting 17.5 Job Posting 17.6 Resume Posting 17.7 E-Mail Posting 17.8 Search the Site 17.9 Forums 18. Related Web Sites 18.1 Home Loans 18.2 Media 18.3 Brokers 18.4 Mortgage Bank 18.5 Employment 18.6 Real Estate 18.7 Legal 18.8 Finance 18.9 Banking 18.10 Technology
Sell House
How to sell from Channel4.com/4Homes E4 More4 FilmFour FourDocs TV Listings Site A-Z NEWS FILM HOMES LIFE ENTERTAINMENT HISTORY SCIENCE COMMUNITY SHOP SPORT CULTURE CARS MONEY VIDEO LEARNING HEALTH MUSIC GAMES Home Welcome News On TV Grand Designs Grand Designs Abroad Previous Houses Features Information Streets Ahead Property Ladder Location, Location Relocation, Relocation Home from Home City Gardener Selling Houses Room for Improvement Up Your Street Making Space A Place In The Sun The Great Garden Challenge Home or Away A Place in France A Place in Greece A Place in Greece House Auction More Programmes Presenters TV Listings Buying & Selling Where to Buy How to Buy How to Sell Special Cases House Price Index Renting Property Search DIY & Building Guides Building a House Ask the Expert Style Design Guides Features Living Rooms -- Bedrooms -- Kids Rooms -- Storage solutions -- Dining Rooms -- Home Office -- Hall -- Outdoor Living -- Period Styles -- Buying Abroad Country Guides Features Property of the Week Chat, Vote & Win Vote Win Forum -- Newsletter Forum Profit from Property Buy to Let Property Development Money Deals SEARCH All 4Homes: On TV Buying & Selling Renting Property Search DIY & Building Style Buying Abroad Chat, Vote, Win Profit from Property HOW TO SELL Home Information Packs What impact will new plans have on the way you sell your house? Making The Most Of.... ...your Kitchen There's more to it than baking bread or brewing coffee ...your Garden It's not all about what goes on inside Features House Doctors Want your house to look the best - send for the doctor Smooth Moves Taking the stress out of the big move 10 Steps To Presenting Your Bathroom 10 Steps To Presenting Your Bedroom 10 Steps To Presenting Your House's Exterior 10 Steps To Presenting Your Children's Room 10 Steps To Presenting Your Living Room UK PROPERTY SEARCH Over 150,000 homes Type a location: Price range: Min Price £0 £50,000 £75,000 £100,000 £125,000 £150,000 £175,000 £200,000 £225,000 £250,000 £275,000 £300,000 £325,000 £350,000 £375,000 £400,000 £425,000 £450,000 £475,000 £500,000 £550,000 £600,000 £650,000 £700,000 £750,000 £800,000 £850,000 £900,000 £950,000 £1,000,000 Max Price £50,000 £75,000 £100,000 £125,000 £150,000 £175,000 £200,000 £225,000 £250,000 £275,000 £300,000 £325,000 £350,000 £375,000 £400,000 £425,000 £450,000 £475,000 £500,000 £550,000 £600,000 £650,000 £700,000 £750,000 £800,000 £850,000 £900,000 £950,000 £1,000,000 £10,000,000 Min bedrooms: Min Beds 1 2 3 4 5 6 New homes only 4HOMES MAIL Enter your email to sign up to the 4Homes newsletter POLL Who is your favourite presenter? FIND OUT MORE Buying Abroad Advice on buying overseas GRAND DESIGNS CD ROM A comprehensive 'info tool' for anyone looking to renovate their dream home CHAT, VOTE , WIN Competitions Your chance to win a holiday and get away this winter CHAT Homes Chatroom Talk about all things Homes in the Channel 4 Chatroom About C4 | Jobs | Text Only | Access Advice | Contact Us | Terms and Conditions | Privacy | Help | Online Ad Sales
INVESTMENT PROPERTY HISTORY OF
IAS Plus International Accounting Standards IAS 40, Investment Property Home Site Map Standards Interpretations Agenda Structure Newsletter Resources Countries/Regions Links Search STANDARDS: IAS 40 INVESTMENT PROPERTY HISTORY OF IAS 40 October 1984 Exposure Draft E26 Accounting for Investments March 1986 IAS 25 Accounting for Investments 1 January 1987 Effective Date of IAS 25 December 1999 Exposure Draft E64 Investment Property April 2000 IAS 40 Investment Property superseded those portions of IAS 25 that addressed investment property and withdrew IAS 25 1 January 2001 Effective Date of IAS 40 (2000) 18 December 2003 Revised version of IAS 40 issued by the IASB The summary below reflects the revisions. 1 January 2005 Effective date of IAS 40 (Revised 2003) RELATED INTERPRETATIONS Issues Relating to This Standard that IFRIC Did Not Add to Its Agenda SUMMARY OF IAS 40 Definition of Investment Property Investment property is property (land or a building or part of a building or both) held (by the owner or by the lessee under a finance lease) to earn rentals or for capital appreciation or both. [IAS 40.5] Examples of investment property: [IAS 40.8] Land held for long-term capital appreciation Land held for undecided future use Building leased out under an operating lease Vacant building held to be leased out under an operating lease The following are not investment property and, therefore, are outside the scope of IAS 40: [IAS 40.5 and 40.9] property held for use in the production or supply of goods or services or for administrative purposes; property held for sale in the ordinary course of business or in the process of construction of development for such sale (IAS 2 Inventories); property being constructed or developed on behalf of third parties (IAS 11 Construction Contracts); owner-occupied property (IAS 16 Property, Plant and Equipment), including property held for future use as owner-occupied property, property held for future development and subsequent use as owner-occupied property, property occupied by employees and owner-occupied property awaiting disposal; property that is being constructed of developed for use as an investment property (IAS 16 applies to such property until construction or development is complete). However, IAS 40 does apply to existing investment property that is being redeveloped for continuing use as investment property; and property leased to another entity under an finance lease. Other Classification Issues Property held under an operating lease. A property interest that is held by a lessee under an operating lease may be classified and accounted for as investment property provided that: [IAS 40.6] the rest of the definition of investment property is met; the operating lease is accounted for as if it were a finance lease in accordance with IAS 17 Leases; and the lessee uses the fair value model set out in this Standard for the asset recognised. An entity may make the foregoing classification on a property-by-property basis. Partial own use. If the owner uses part of the property for its own use, and part to earn rentals or for capital appreciation, and the portions can be sold or leased out separately, they are accounted for separately. Therefore the part that is rented out is investment property. If the portions cannot be sold or leased out separately, the property is investment property only if the owner-occupied portion is insignificant. [IAS 40.10] Ancillary services. If the enterprise provides ancillary services to the occupants of a property held by the enterprise, the appropriateness of classification as investment property is determined by the significance of the services provided. If those services are a relatively insignificant component of the arrangement as a whole (for instance, the building owner supplies security and maintenance services to the lessees), then the enterprise may treat the property as investment property. Where the services provided are more significant (such as in the case of an owner-managed hotel), the property should be classified as owner-occupied. [IAS 40.11] Intracompany rentals. Property rented to a parent, subsidiary, or fellow subsidiary is not investment property in consolidated financial statements that include both the lessor and the lessee, because the property is owner-occupied from the perspective of the group. However, such property could qualify as investment property in the separate financial statements of the lessor, if the definition of investment property is otherwise met. [IAS 40.15] Recognition Investment property should be recognised as an asset when it is probable that the future economic benefits that are associated with the property will flow to the enterprise, and the cost of the property can be reliably measured. [IAS 40.16] Initial measurement Investment property is initially measured at cost, including transaction costs. Such cost should not include start-up costs, abnormal waste, or initial operating losses incurred before the investment property achieves the planned level of occupancy. [IAS 40.20 and 40.23] Measurement subsequent to initial recognition IAS 40 permits enterprises to choose between: [IAS 40.30] a fair value model; and a cost model. One method must be adopted for all of an entity's investment property. Change is permitted only if this results in a more appropriate presentation. IAS 40 notes that this is highly unlikely for a change from a fair value model to a cost model. Fair value model Investment property is remeasured at fair value, which is the amount for which the property could be exchanged between knowledgeable, willing parties in an arm's length transaction. Gains or losses arising from changes in the fair value of investment property must be included in net profit or loss for the period in which it arises. [IAS 40.35] Fair value should reflect the actual market state and circumstances as of the balance sheet date. [IAS 40.38] The best evidence of fair value is normally given by current prices on an active market for similar property in the same location and condition and subject to similar lease and other contracts. [IAS 40.45] In the absence of such information, the entitymay consider current prices for properties of a different nature or subject to different conditions, recent prices on less active markets with adjustments to reflect changes in economic conditions, and discounted cash flow projections based on reliable estimates of future cash flows. [IAS 40.46] There is a rebuttable presumption that the enterprise will be able to determine the fair value of an investment property reliably on a continuing basis. However, if, in exceptional circumstances, an entity follows the fair value model but at acquisition concludes that a property's fair value is not expected to be reliably measurable on a continuing basis, the property is accounted for in accordance with the benchmark treatment under IAS 16 , Property, Plant and Equipment (cost less accumulated depreciation less accumulated impairment losses). [IAS 40.53] Where a property has previously been measured at fair value, it should continue to be measured at fair value until disposal, even if comparable market transactions become less frequent or market prices become less readily available. [IAS 40.55] Cost Model After initial recognition, investment property is accounted for in accordance with the cost model as set out in IAS 16 , Property, Plant and Equipment cost less accumulated depreciation and less accumulated impairment losses. [IAS 40.56] Transfers to or from Investment Property Classification Transfers to, or from, investment property should only be made when there is a change in use, evidenced by: [IAS 40.57] commencement of owner-occupation (transfer from investment property to owner-occupied property); commencement of development with a view to sale (transfer from investment property to inventories); end of owner-occupation (transfer from owner-occupied property to investment property); commencement of an operating lease to another party (transfer from inventories to investment property); or end of construction or development (transfer from property in the course of construction/development to investment property. When an enterprise decides to sell an investment property without development, the property is not reclassified as investment property but is dealt with as investment property until it is disposed of. The following rules apply for accounting for transfers between categories: for a transfer from investment property carried at fair value to owner-occupied property or inventories, the fair value at the change of use is the 'cost' of the property under its new classification; [IAS 40.60] for a transfer from owner-occupied property to investment property carried at fair value, IAS 16 should be applied up to the date of reclassification. Any difference arising between the carrying amount under IAS 16 at that date and the fair value is dealt with as a revaluation under IAS 16; [IAS 40.61] for a transfer from inventories to investment property at fair value, any difference between the fair value at the date of transfer and it previous carrying amount should be recognised in net profit or loss for the period; [IAS 40.63] and when an entity completes construction/development of an investment property that will be carried at fair value, any difference between the fair value at the date of transfer and the previous carrying amount should be recognised in net profit or loss for the period. [IAS 40.65] When an entity uses the cost model for investment property, transfers between categories do not change the carrying amount of the property transferred, and they do not change the cost of the property for measurement or disclosure purposes. Disposal An investment property should be derecognised on disposal or when the investment property is permanently withdrawn from use and no future economic benefits are expected from its disposal. The gain or loss on disposal should be calculated as the difference between the net disposal proceeds and the carrying amount of the asset and should be recognised as income or expense in the income statement. [IAS 40.66 and 40.69] Compensation from third parties is recognised when it becomes receivable. [IAS 40.72] Disclosure Both Fair Value Model and Cost Model [IAS 40.75] whether the fair value or the cost model is used; if the fair value model is used, whether property interests held under operating leases are classified and accounted for as investment property; if classification is difficult, the criteria to distinguish investment property from owner-occupied property and from property held for sale. the methods and significant assumptions applied in determining the fair value of investment property. the extent to which the fair value of investment property is based on a valuation by a qualified independent valuer; if there has been no such valuation, that fact must be disclosed. the amounts recognised in profit or loss for: rental income from investment property; direct operating expenses (including repairs and maintenance) arising from investment property that generated rental income during the period; and direct operating expenses (including repairs and maintenance) arising from investment property that did not generate rental income during the period. restrictions on the realisability of investment property or the remittance of income and proceeds of disposal. contractual obligations to purchase, construct, or develop investment property or for repairs, maintenance or enhancements. Additional Disclosures for the Fair Value Model [IAS 40.76] a reconciliation between the carrying amounts of investment property at the beginning and end of the period, showing additions, disposals, fair value adjustments, net foreign exchange differences, transfers to and from inventories and owner-occupied property, and other changes. significant adjustments to an outside valuation (if any) if an entity that otherwise uses the fair value model measures an item of investment property using the cost model, certain additional disclosures are required. Additional Disclosures for the Cost Model [IAS 40.79] the depreciation methods used; the useful lives or the depreciation rates used; the gross carrying amount and the accumulated depreciation (aggregated with accumulated impairment losses) at the beginning and end of the period; a reconciliation of the carrying amount of investment property at the beginning and end of the period, showing additions, disposals, depreciation, impairment recognised or reversed, foreign exchange differences, transfers to and from inventories and owner-occupied property, and other changes; the fair value of investment property. If the fair value of an item of investment property cannot be measured reliably, additional disclosures are required, including, if possible, the range of estimates within which fair value is highly likely to lie.