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14 February 2025 | 161 replies
Once upon a time they tried just camping out on properties for extended time periods.
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16 February 2025 | 71 replies
Specifically, under a properly structured Trust the following limitations will apply during the period that the property is held by the Trust: (i) the Trust cannot raise new capital; (ii) other than in the case of a tenant bankruptcy or insolvency, the Trust cannot renegotiate or modify an existing loan nor can the Trust refinance or enter into a new loan during the period that the property is held by the Trust; (iii) the Trust cannot renegotiate or modify its existing leases or enter into new leases other than in the case of a tenant bankruptcy or insolvency (in the case of a Trust that adopted a master lease structure, this limitation applies to the master lease and not the underlying third-party leases); (iv) the Trust cannot reinvest the proceeds from the sale of the property; (v) the Trust cannot modify or improve the property other than undertaking normal maintenance or minor non-structural repairs; (vi) the Trust cannot hold its reserves other than in cash or short-term obligations; and (viii) the Trust must distribute all of its cash, other than cash held for normal reserves, on a current basis.
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10 February 2025 | 9 replies
Your interest rate, on a fixed rate loan, should remain unchanged and your mortgage should not be called due.However you should still confirm that this is the case with your lender (and read your mortgage commitment) out of an abundance of caution and because some loans and programs do require a longer seasoning period.
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9 February 2025 | 3 replies
I am also listening to the Bigger Pockets podcasts daily during every free period I have throughout my day while trying to learn as much as possible.
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25 January 2025 | 5 replies
I tend to ask the same questions multiple times over a period of time to see if I get consistent answers.
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30 January 2025 | 5 replies
@Argel Algura.Congrats first on your last.year and how much you have accomplished in a short time period.
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22 February 2025 | 18 replies
It can provide a very misleading valuation.Your appreciation numbers reflect just below 4% a year (I used 8 year hold) on both properties which is below national average for this period and below what neighborhoodscout depicts for Chicago 10 year average. https://www.neighborhoodscout.com/il/chicago/real-estateLooking at this from the outside, I am missing a lot of details such as your interest rate, is there a prop tax benefit for long holds (by the way look up prop 13 for CA at some point as it may play a role in your decision to purchase once you relocate to San Diego), the neighborhood, appreciation potential going forward, any emotional attachment, etc.
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4 February 2025 | 7 replies
Have them pay a week or two before they arrive when they are past your cancellation period.
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20 February 2025 | 12 replies
Of course values fluctuate and this is over a long period of time.What LA and NY also have that other markets may not is high paying jobs mixed with no land to build more housing.
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23 January 2025 | 4 replies
Oversimplifying it just a bit, the investor profits from:- a non-refundable option paid by the tenant-buyer which gives them the right to purchase the property within their option period- the spread between the rent paid by the investor to the property owner and the rent paid to the investor by the tenant-buyer over the life of the option- the spread between the price ultimately paid by the investor when they exercise their option with the owner and the price ultimately paid by the tenant-buyer when they exercise their option with the investorClear as mud?