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1 November 2024 | 5 replies
"The house band located at the sink on the right side of the house, to the left of the front entryway, and along the rear wall is discolored and decayed in a manner typical of water damage.
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31 October 2024 | 9 replies
Quote from @Alonzo Moreland: A high water bill is typically due to a toilet that constantly runs/flushes.
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31 October 2024 | 10 replies
Blanket loans are typically ARM's instead of fixed, and then you are tying the two properties together.
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31 October 2024 | 9 replies
You typically will make more money, the longer you hold.
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31 October 2024 | 12 replies
While it’s not typically known for multi-family deals, that could be a plus since there’s less competition.
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28 October 2024 | 9 replies
:Class A Properties:Cashflow vs Appreciation: Typically, 3-5 years for positive cashflow, but you get highest relative rent & value appreciation.Vacancy Est: Historically 10%, 5% the more recent norm.Tenant Pool: Majority will have FICO scores of 680+ (roughly 5% probability of default), zero evictions in last 7 years.Class B Properties:Cashflow vs Appreciation: Typically, decent amount of relative rent & value appreciation.Vacancy Est: Historically 10%, 5% should be applied only if proper research done to support.Tenant Pool: Majority will have FICO scores of 620-680 (around 10% probability of default), some blemishes, but should have no evictions in last 5 yearsClass C Properties:Cashflow vs Appreciation: Typically, high cashflow and at the lower end of relative rent & value appreciation.
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30 October 2024 | 21 replies
:Class A Properties:Cashflow vs Appreciation: Typically, 3-5 years for positive cashflow, but you get highest relative rent & value appreciation.Vacancy Est: Historically 10%, 5% the more recent norm.Tenant Pool: Majority will have FICO scores of 680+ (roughly 5% probability of default), zero evictions in last 7 years.Class B Properties:Cashflow vs Appreciation: Typically, decent amount of relative rent & value appreciation.Vacancy Est: Historically 10%, 5% should be applied only if proper research done to support.Tenant Pool: Majority will have FICO scores of 620-680 (around 10% probability of default), some blemishes, but should have no evictions in last 5 yearsClass C Properties:Cashflow vs Appreciation: Typically, high cashflow and at the lower end of relative rent & value appreciation.
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31 October 2024 | 12 replies
Hi Kyle,Given your plan to acquire 19 rental units over 10 years, here’s a realistic projection:For cash flow, assuming each unit rents for about $1,200 to $1,500/month and generates $300-$400 in net cash flow after expenses, you could see $68,000 to $91,000 annually from 19 units.Appreciation typically runs at 3-5% per year.
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30 October 2024 | 35 replies
@William Coet it’s a different business model altogether.I love highly desirable areas that attract highly skilled high income college educated workforces.They tend to be more liberal and therefore the landlord tenant laws.The percent of their income that goes to rent is typically much less than 20% so a rental increase of 5-10% is nothing to them.They are typically lower cap rate areas and therefore every dollar of net operating income that is earned is explosive to the underlying asset value.
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29 October 2024 | 6 replies
As noted, any commercial sized assets are already held in an LLC, which it typically the borrowing entity, which is owned by an LLC where the LPs come in.