Main documents required to sell a property


Marg Swarnabhoomi's avatarmarg swarnabhoomi

If you are planning to sell a property, the documents are very important. They will probably be first scrutinised by the prospective buyer before even looking at the property. The buyer will insist on checking the original documents before finalising the deal.

These are the documents you need to have in order:

Letter of allotment

The letter that confers allotment of the property to you from the relevant society or authority is a primary document you need to have in order.

Sale deed

The original conveyance or sale deed from the previous owners of the property is needed. If you have lodged the original deed for registration with the registrar, you need to provide a copy of the conveyance deed or sale deed along with a photocopy of the receipt from the subregistrar where the documents have been lodged for registration.

This traces the ownership of the property. Missing documents…

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Purchase Of Land – Legal Check-Lists


Marg Swarnabhoomi's avatarmarg swarnabhoomi

Owning a house is an important thing in one’s life. However, one needs to be careful while buying a property to avoid falling into legal hassles. Before buying a land, a number of checks need to be done to confirm that the land has a clear and marketable title. The legal status of the land is one of the first issues that should be addressed before confirming a property.


Title deeds

The first step is to see the title deed of the land, which you are going to buy.

* Confirm whether the land is in the name of the seller and that the full right to sell the land lies with only him and no other person.
* It is better to get the original deed examined by a lawyer. This is to check details like whether the seller has permitted any entry/access to others through this land and…

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The Most Expensive Real Estate In The World


wealthymatters

Monaco – $5,408 PSF Read more of this post

NHB RESIDEX


Sooner or later everyone in India has to come to terms with the price of houses.Perhaps the person might be thinking of buying a house  outright or on EMI for use by himself/herself or family.Perhaps it is a second home for convenience.Maybe the person is planning on buying a house as an investment or even trying to fund a retirement by a reverse mortgage.

A house is a a pretty big purchase and is bound to affect one’s net worth and cash flow in a pretty big way.One place to get some decent and neutral information on real estate price movements is here: http://www.nhb.org.in/Residex/Data&Graphs.php

Mohnish Pabrai


wealthymatters.com

Mohnish Pabrai is an Indian-American businessman and deep value investor.He is the managing partner of the Pabrai Investment Funds, which he founded in 1999.He is also a member of the Young President’s Organization (YPO) and a charter member of The Indus Entrepreneurs (TIE).

Monhnish Pabrai first trained as a computer engineer. He then spent nearly two decades in the tech field.In 1990, he quit his job working as an engineer for Tellabs in Chicago and abandoned his master’s thesis at the Illinois Institute of Technology to launch TransTech, an IT consulting and systems integration company, which he funded with $30,000 from his retirement account and $70,000 from credit cards.His father encouraged him in the endeavour,saying that it was the right thing to do as staying at Tellabs and following the staid boring corporate path was high risk. Starting a business on the other hand was low risk, could give high returns and high adventure. As Monaish was single at the time there were few complications and in the worst case, he would lose everything ,which wasn’t much anyway,and could declare personal bankruptcy and start over. By 1999, Transtech, which had grown to 200 employees and $30 million in revenues, held no thrill. So he sold it. And during the tech boom,he started another company, internet incubator Digital Disrupters, which had a very painful and swift demise due the tightening of capital markets .In 2000, he sold TransTech to Kurt Salmon Associates.During late 1999, with nine other investors contributing $100,000 each,Mohnish started Pabrai Funds with $1,000,000 in assets. Pabrai Funds was modelled on the original “Buffett Partnership.” Read more of this post