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1 May 2012 | 5 replies
To figure your expenses in this situation, you would apportion the expenses based on the ration of rental use and personal use.
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4 May 2012 | 2 replies
If you pay a seller's portion of that pro-rationing, then that amount becomes part of your basis.
15 April 2014 | 67 replies
Nathan Emmert I like reading your posts because I like your your rationality and bottom line thinking when it comes to numbers.
24 June 2012 | 35 replies
The issue of short-sales & the rationalizations that agents have been doing with them have twisted a weak argument into a cult-like mantra " we don't work for the banks".
19 July 2012 | 2 replies
Really no different than tax pro-rations, if you look at it that way.
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2 December 2013 | 33 replies
If you only need 800 sq ft and can rent an apartment for 800 a month then it might be better for you than buying a 2,000 sq ft house that cost you much more in maintenance and taxes each year.If you bought your first house to live in that might affect your debt ration to qualify for an income property.Then if you have to wait a few years interest rates can be higher and prices could have risen more.
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31 July 2012 | 7 replies
She's talked to Wells Fargo.. credit score is in the upper 600's, excellent debt to income rations.. but apparently she did a short sale a year ago as she had to re-locate, etc.
2 August 2012 | 18 replies
While you might make an exception to go lower on an occasional deal you can't make it a habit to settle and just get comfortable by not having to negotiate your deals harder.Thanks for the informative reply and your rationalization.
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13 August 2014 | 2 replies
The most expensive word in the RE Investor's vocabulary is "rationalization".
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9 December 2016 | 94 replies
It used to be, way back before the year 2000, that if you had a house CF over $50/month you would happy, and rationalized it to be a good investment because of depreciation and appreciation.