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5 August 2007 | 5 replies
I told him I will work with him on a pure option deal.
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9 February 2006 | 5 replies
However, if you pay less for the new property then you can be liable for the difference.I have never stepped down in a 1031 exchange so this is purely conjecture... but I would guess that your tax liability would be something like this: $Sale price of your current home- $Sale price of home you buy through 1031--------------------------------------------------- $Boot $Boot- $500K------------------ $Taxable gain
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7 April 2007 | 3 replies
I don't think pre-approval letters are "worthless" but they are if you take them at pure face value without talking to the loan officer directly.
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23 April 2007 | 18 replies
Instead of trying to put a number on something that I can't possibly know and that is purely random, if I use the 45% to 50% total expense number that has proven true over hundreds of thousands of rental units, I will be MUCH MORE ACCURATE.
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11 May 2007 | 2 replies
If you are able to get a 30yr fixed @ 7 percent and roll all of your improvements into the loan, you are looking at around 300 a month extra, but thats not pure cash flow.
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19 May 2007 | 7 replies
I also like the idea of providing SOLUTIONS to people's problems instead of just looking at it as a pure money-making thing.
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27 June 2007 | 16 replies
Probably can't be measured in pure $$ but will make living there more enjoyable.Adding a bath is IMO (and statistically proven) a moneymaker, particularly if you can do most/all work yourself, partiuclarly the "finish" like tiling, because it's very labor intensive.IIRC single bath houses have been considered "technologically" obsolete since the early '80 by the Amer.
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8 October 2007 | 6 replies
Loan Criteria Documentation Full Income / Verified Assets Main Credit Score 580 Occupancy Owner Occupied, Non-Owner Occupied Foreclosure 84 Months Old Bankruptcy Ch. 13 84 Months Old Bankruptcy Ch. 7 84 Months Old Loan Amount $100,000 - $1,500,000 Lien Position 1st Mortgage Cash Out Amount $1,500,000 Loan Purpose Purchase, Rate and Term Refinance, Cash-out Property Types Hotel/Motel, Other Commercial Types, Restaurant/Bar Rate Types Straight Fixed, Adjustable, Hybrid Amortization 15 Years, 20 Years, 30 Years States AL, AK, AZ, AR, CA, CO, CT, DC, DE, FL, GA, HI, ID, IL, IN, IA, KS, KY, LA, ME, MD, MA, MI, MN, MS, MO, MT, NE, NV, NH, NJ, NM, NY, NC, ND, OH, OK, OR, PA, RI, SC, SD, TN, TX, UT, VT, VA, WA, WV, WI, WY Special Features Borrower is a Corporation, Borrower is a Trust, Interest Only Payments Available, Borrower is a LLC or Partnership You might even have to consider a hard money approach---here is an example of what you can expect:COMMERCIAL, 001 70% commercial Loan Program Notes • Loan amounts are allowed from $100,000 to $5 million
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10 July 2007 | 31 replies
The financial data used to determine the market cap is pure fiction; the resulting market cap is therefore nonsense; and the majority of residential units in the United States are owned by small investors - the majority of whom fail.
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30 July 2007 | 8 replies
If you carry a 30-year note at 10% (just as an example) with a $2K down payment on the same property it'll take you 9.5 years to recover your full $25K (the payments are almost exactly $200) but then the 20 years after that are pure profit.