Rick H.
DUE-ON-SALE-O-METER
8 June 2015 | 105 replies
It is an obvious and easy to detect loan defect that will affect the current (at the time) investor from disposition the loan according to it's master plan, as such it will eventually get dealt with.
Yaya Y.
How do you make money from a syndication?
5 March 2018 | 12 replies
Acquisition fees (ranging 1% to 3% of the acquisition price), finance fees (up to 1% of the loan amount for acquisition loans and/or refinance loans), asset management fees (usually around 1% of either gross collected income or the invested equity or the invested equity plus debt--varies from sponsor to sponsor), and disposition fees (1-2% of the sales price when the property sells).
Jigar Patel
Insurance claims for theft/brake-ins at Investment rentals
23 January 2023 | 7 replies
A police report usually helps greatly with these things, so if you haven't already filed one I'd recommend it.How has the disposition of personal items gone so far?
Christopher Montgomery
First lien foreclosed is second still good?
15 June 2017 | 11 replies
My question is, how do you find out the disposition of the 1st lien ahead of time?
James G.
Equity Partner
25 March 2014 | 13 replies
Jonathan Twombly Andrew Syrios Do your funds/syndications include disposition/reversion fees?
Donna Talley
Disposition of Deposit
16 August 2017 | 4 replies
My question is...if they are being evicted are we required to submit to them, the Disposition of Deposit and return their deposit?
Marian Smith
Does my Schedule E look like yours? Ma and Pop landlords
14 January 2015 | 1 reply
Individual Income Tax Return) married filing jointlySchedule C (Profit or Loss from Business)Schedule E (Supplemental Income and Loss)Schedule SE (Self Employment Tax)Schedule 8949 (Sale and Other Disposition of Capital Assets)Form 2106 (Employee Business Expense)Form 8829 (Expenses for Business Use of Your Home)Form 4562 (Depreciation & Amortization) non-rental propertyForm 8582 (Passive Activity Loss Limitations)From our Partnership Return:Form 1065 (U.S.
Jackson Tate
Tax Strategies for Flipping
10 April 2018 | 62 replies
The key differentiating factor from what you've seen above is that you called your property a "flip," when referencing it.The "context," and "facts," determine how things are taxed.If you had said I had a property I fixed up and your intent was to hold and rent it out, but now after 1 year you're figuring darn the market is so much higher now Im just going to sell it, then it would be taxed as long term capital gains based on applicable rates.All you have to do is to change the context/intent/facts and season those parameters prior to your disposition of your property and that would change your tax brackets you're subject to.This is the same way for 1031 exchanges too.
Jack S.
Syndication associated fees
31 January 2023 | 26 replies
Disposition fees are still pretty common but are falling out of favor.
Nav Hasen
Newbie to Multi-Family Apartment Investing in Los Angeles County
8 December 2022 | 4 replies
My team and I work in property acquisition and disposition for investors.