
12 October 2016 | 13 replies
You are not buying this house, you are buying a revenue stream.

15 August 2016 | 15 replies
Also spending is more than revenues which is a concern.US has $20 Trillion in debt.

16 September 2016 | 10 replies
The landlord/contract holder would keep 40 percent of the revenue from them.

22 August 2016 | 1 reply
3rd one is in Quebec, Federal Corporation, opened since 2009 with lots of history and revenues in the past, and will be empty as soon as I sell #1 and #2....

19 August 2016 | 12 replies
Perform a quick cost analysis on the eviction process to see just how much it will cost you, then offer cash to prevent the time/revenue lost.

12 October 2016 | 9 replies
Some depend on revenue and credit and some can be secured by using real estate collateral or other valuables.

20 August 2016 | 2 replies
They also declined a business loan due to seasonal rent variability and the new unit having unestablished revenue.

25 August 2016 | 19 replies
The upside is the rents are below market value and there's an additional revenue opportunity with the parking spaces (they say there's 7, but it looks more like 4-5, realistically).

24 August 2016 | 6 replies
@Andrew R. the NRW 91-01: Withholding on Sale of Real Property by Nonresidents is a good link - I went to bookmark it and found I had already done so in 2012 :)My understanding is that it's "withholding" meaning the seller may get some or all of it back once s/he/they file a tax return in Rhode Island for that year.Also a close reading mentions a possible exemption for sellers 55+"In the event that the sale of the property by a nonresident will not be subject to tax under Sections 121 (One-Time Exclusion - Over 55 Principal Residents)... the nonresident seller must make the gain election and file the RI Form 71.3 Election even though no withholding need be made""If the property Martha was selling was her residence and if she otherwise qualified and intends to treat the sale under Section 121 of the Internal Revenue Code (one Time Exclusion Over 55 Principal Residence), she would still have to file the election form 20 days before the closing but would complete the election form and use the special types of transactions area on the back.

10 September 2016 | 89 replies
Based on my experience with the cost, revenue and expenses of Indy and KC I would consider purchasing there again...as for my experience in Dallas area I won't buy there again.