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8 June 2016 | 14 replies
We consider the BP community to be the most informed in the country, or at least that we have easy access to.We are finding that experienced investors, if they see the investment as risky, they wont invest, and the amount of investment required doesn't increase or decrease their interest.
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7 April 2017 | 14 replies
Electric use is not going to decrease in the future so I see no reason to delay making the required improvements.
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27 January 2016 | 23 replies
., a decrease in home prices wouldn't affect the rents very much, but that's very case-by-case, market-by-market.
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20 March 2017 | 21 replies
Now if you know the steps before this, building rapport, the upfront agreement to avoid the me think it over, discovering the motivation of the seller, and decreasing the asking price, this “what if step” is just a trial close, and unless you really haven’t done a good job with the 4 steps before, if this should be very easy, should be an easy close.
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31 December 2015 | 8 replies
a 30-40% increase wouldn't be so terrible that it eats up all my cash flow, but it does decrease the returns a bit, but the property would still be performing.
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17 July 2019 | 12 replies
There are a lot of people who over pay for properties, but those are the ones who end up in foreclosures when the market turns and the rent decrease while vacancies increase and they can no longer afford the mortgage payment.
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31 July 2015 | 8 replies
I spoke with the property manager about this, and she said the board doesn't enforce it, it's unenforceable (apparently the development period has passed so it's no longer a valid rule since it said DURING the development period specifically; she said it was requested by the developer to prevent investors from buying the homes and renting them out initially which would decrease resale value) and they have no intention of enforcing it, in fact, they want to take it out because they'd rather have the houses occupied than empty, which causes other problems.But she also said that they will actually be meeting with several home owners to discuss as some want cap or outright ban.
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4 August 2015 | 6 replies
No guarantee that people don't fudge the numbers, but since the expenses decrease their tax burden if they are getting creative they would be overstating expenses, not under.
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1 August 2015 | 26 replies
Truthfully, we'd do this even if we were paying a slightly higher rate, but the decrease made it all the more palatable.
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16 February 2016 | 66 replies
I'm also basing my analysis on buying at a 20% discount with 25% down which decreases the mortgage payment substantially of course.