
21 April 2015 | 14 replies
Add in 8% for Property Management and another 2% for those damn incidental costs we slice off a hefty $5,319 Dropping free cash flow to $7071 or $147/unit/mo!

19 September 2015 | 34 replies
., instead of toddler slamming the door, toddler is sliced to pieces by falling glass from the wind blowing the door into the coat hook).

31 December 2012 | 7 replies
While it helps to have qualified investors and if not having had past relationships, the slicing up of a security interest is still a problem.

16 January 2021 | 8 replies
Purchasing property (or inheritances) like "pizza by the slice" has been one of my most lucrative program strategies but its NOT for inexperienced investors.

8 February 2017 | 8 replies
Agreed, and on the other end of the spectrum, say $2000/month or more, it is not 50% either, more like 25% ... this is the problem, it is not consistent or reliable except for MAYBE a very thin slice of that rental market.

29 April 2014 | 12 replies
No matter how you "slice it" even if you are willing to stay involved you are not properly positioned while " deployed" .

29 April 2014 | 9 replies
Depending on the state they may want their slice of the pie also.I think with the tax liabilities and the potential LLC liabilities this would be a hard sell.You could structure the LLC’s thru a 401K or IRA for some tax shelter but then you’re still limited to holding for one (1) year.If someone else knows how we can save a penny on tax I would like to know, it’s possible my thinking is flawed ??

19 April 2016 | 11 replies
You have to be careful with the equity slice you take.

15 February 2017 | 35 replies
I don't see them eliminating interest expense from business taxes.. if the business is paying interest that is to buy capital and expand, saying that interest expense is not a business expense would be slicing the throat of business expansion, and that is ALL business in the US, not just real estate.Eliminating the mortgage interest deduction for people would generate some weird stuff (I think).

29 March 2017 | 31 replies
@Kevin BurnsOne of the things I have recently learned is how you can slice and dice your contractor relationships.