
10 July 2024 | 6 replies
It may be good for CRM.When I said bad data..Many of the properties e.g. failed listings failed two years back..filters don't produce correct reports, MLS listings are incorrect- seems like they dont refresh regulalry, equity and rate seems like guesses.Having said that I still believe it may be the best of all.Thanks for your responseQuote from @Justin Silverio: @Sandeep Dhall I'm curious what you mean by bad data.

10 July 2024 | 9 replies
@Eduard Gibert Renart - Interest-only notes would produce a consistent yield.Another strategy is to buy discounted notes.

10 July 2024 | 11 replies
Like for me I have a business I enjoy that produces active income I don't see myself stepping out of anytime soon, so I am prioritizing the nicer areas/properties that might not cash flow as much right now but will in the future and provide me with good depreciation to offset active income right now.Just such a personalized thing that doesn't have a one size fits all approach.

9 July 2024 | 17 replies
The mfg won't produce a "load rating chart" since there are too many load combinations to worry about.

12 July 2024 | 48 replies
There are only about 100 to maybe 150 of these properties produced per year.

10 July 2024 | 4 replies
I’m sure they exist somewhere, but the vast majority of small businesses just don’t generate the income nor the margins to hire the quality of people nor the specialized skills needed to produce without the involvement of the owner willing to wear many different hats, pick up the slack where needed, and work the hours necessary to make the business a success.

10 July 2024 | 87 replies
So it is safe to say, the business has to pay for 100% of it's operations, from about 7% of it's intake potential client's. 93% are JUST an expense with NO revenue produced.

8 July 2024 | 20 replies
Because I invest in income producing property, my net rental yield is around 8%, with yearly increases, leveraged with 4-5% loans, creating a net cash flow and debt reduction yield of about 10%.

12 July 2024 | 42 replies
But the nice thing about a commercial property is that you do have control over the value of the property. buy-out costs have to be baked into a business plan along with a clear understanding of what the property can produce over a given timeline. $2.2M for 12 units could be a really good deal in a good location with the right plan or it could be money pit and the end of an investor if it is in the wrong place or a bad building.