
20 March 2020 | 13 replies
Simple formula determines if a house is a good rehab candidate:(ARV x 70%) – Repairs = Maximum purchase price.ARV = After Repair Value 8)

25 June 2007 | 4 replies
Determine your buy/hold/sell costs + ROI and whether or not you should buy this will be revealed---use a formula like this:BPO (Best Possible Offer) = CMV (Current Market Value) - Rehab - B/H/S Fees (Buy/Hold/Sell) - ROI (Return of Investment)Regards,Scott Miller

25 June 2007 | 8 replies
Originally posted by "REI":Standard formula says:((ARV * 70%) - (all buying costs + all holding costs + all selling costs + all repair costs + contingency)) is the maximum you can pay and consistently make a profit.

7 August 2007 | 12 replies
If you had a deal that was in his market and fit his formula then you have a deal worth presenting.

8 October 2008 | 15 replies
Investing long distance blindly is a formula for disaster.

22 August 2007 | 15 replies
Hence any deal that matches the formula should be worth your time.John Corey

10 September 2007 | 6 replies
So the numbers were in my formula for my calcualtions just not added together.

20 August 2007 | 3 replies
Using the basic formula, after taking the 30% off it would be less than what the bank wants.

22 August 2007 | 9 replies
Any ideas/formulas on how to decide that the terms of an option agreement??

22 August 2007 | 2 replies
Is there some formula or some guide to determine this?