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2 October 2015 | 3 replies
Not sure.Regarding student debt, if you want to make it look prettier, go file for an income sensitive repayment plan.
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15 October 2019 | 7 replies
Some of the things you will want on that summary sheet is:Capital StructureSources & UsesInvestment Attributes -prop name, vintage, risk profile, units, purchase price, exit price, acq date, exit dateUnit MixDebt HighlightReturn ProfileReturn sensitivity to hold period & purchase priceFinancial Summary (by year)Cumulative Return on Investment** all of this info should be already showing somewhere else in your underwriting model and you just have to link it to this new tab so it auto-updates as you change assumptions in your UW model.
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29 June 2015 | 6 replies
And yes, that is generally the "hood", so if you are considering some sort of rehab you may want to have a conversation with your contractor as to ways to safeguard the house while the work is going on if you decide to move forward with it.
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6 October 2015 | 16 replies
They can be really sensitive to heat, depending on grade I guess, especially the darker colors (ie: trendy gray), and can leave a permanent light discolored mark after you put a hot plate of food on it...like even out of the microwave.
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30 June 2015 | 8 replies
As a result you can make the IRR say pretty much anything you like by changing some assumptions.Since your investor sounds like a financially sophisticated person, a way to impress him or her might be to run a "sensitivity table" that shows various IRRs depending on the inputs.
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2 July 2015 | 0 replies
What’s more, since the decision includes extensive discussion about the many factors that should be considered when looking at a disparate impact claim, the court appears sensitive to the kinds of concerns that were identified by real estate professionals in a working group NAR created several years ago to look at the disparate impact issue.In that group, two main concerns were identified: that real estate professionals and others not be held liable for actions if they had no reasonable way of knowing that a disparate impact would be the outcome, and that real estate professionals not be expected to do extensive research into the possible disparate impact of their actions.
8 July 2015 | 22 replies
Calculate your exit price and see if that's a scenario you can live with, and if you are so inclined, run a sensitivity analysis to calculate your IRR with a variety of income growth factors and exit cap rates.
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7 July 2015 | 15 replies
And if the people they sold to won't just willingly deed it back they can't even control the asset.. since they no longer own it.Sub too while nice for a buyer is incredibly Risky for a seller ... unless very detailed safeguards are put into place.. which of course are rarely done... most sellers just figure this out when they get a late notice and freak out. !!!
8 July 2015 | 4 replies
I think the sensitivity to a recession is greater as you go to the newer and poorer parts of Metro Atlanta.
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11 July 2015 | 14 replies
People with high net worth are very sensitive to the idea that people want something from them.