Free Real Estate Seminar to be held in Fort Worth March 15

by sbellinc | March 14, 2008 at 08:40 am
315 views | 0 Recommendations | 1 comment

WHAT:           If you walked into a bank and asked for a loan to invest in the stock market, they’d probably laugh you out of the building. This is not the case with real estate. Seasoned real estate investor, Pam Hopkins will give a two hour free talk on the opportunities available right now in real estate and the various ways to buy properties with little or no money and no credit. With today’s subprime crisis, she will also discuss how now is the time to turn quick profits buying foreclosures and pre-foreclosed properties.


WHEN:          March 15, 2008


                       10:00 a.m. – noon


WHERE:       Hotel Trinity & Inn Suites (Formerly a Best Western Hotel)
2000 Beach Street  (and I-30)
Fort Worth, Texas  76103


COST:            FREE


REGISTER:  Register at www.crossthejordan.com or by calling 877-510-5263 (LAND).


 


ABOUT PAM HOPKINS
Pam Hopkins started her career in real estate in 1989 as a Century 21 agent. However, the real excitement came for her in 1994 when she applied her industry knowledge and purchased her first investment property. Over the years, Hopkins has purchased properties with a number of creative financing methods and no money down which she began teaching others at her kitchen table in January of 2004. The word of mouth spread so fast that within a few months she had to book hotel conference rooms to accommodate the class. Now Hopkins sells out her monthly classes held in major metropolitan areas across the country and gives private consultation to former students as they grow their investment portfolios. She also has a thriving brokerage business, Hopkins Realty & Associates, with 18 agents.

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Jarrett Martineau
Jarrett Martineau
flagged this story as Needs Improvement

at 09:15 on March 14th, 2008

sbellinc, thanks for the post, however, this reads like a press release and not a
news story. Additionally, it appears to have a commercial purpose,
which would contravene our Terms of Service, and could easily be
construed as spam. If you have questions about what makes a story newsworthy, you should check out our J-Tips for more help. Thanks.

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