
28 March 2018 | 8 replies
.$2,135.00MONTHLY INCOME$1,694.08MONTHLY EXPENSES$440.92MONTHLY CASHFLOW14.08%PRO FORMA CAP$9,853.40NOI$22,125.00TOTAL CASH NEEDED23.91%CASH ON CASH ROI13.59%PURCHASE CAP RATEExpensesIncome50% RuleTotal operating expenses:Mortgage expenses:Vacancy:$170.80Repairs:$213.50CapEx:$106.75Electricity:$50.00Water & Sewer:$162.00Insurance:$120.00Management:$213.50P&I:$380.20Property Taxes:$277.33$72,500PURCHASE PRICEPurchase Closing Costs$2,000.00Estimated Repairs$2,000.00Total Project Cost$76,500.00After Repair Value$70,000.00 Down Payment$18,125.00Loan Amount$54,375.00Loan Points$0.00Amortized Over30 yearsLoan Interest Rate7.500%Monthly P&I$380.20Total Cash Needed$22,125.00 Financial Info2.79%2% RULE $15,625.00TOTAL INITIAL EQUITY2.83GROSS RENT MULTIPLIER 2.16DEBT COVERAGE RATIOAnalysis Over Time3% /yearEXPENSE INCREASE 3% /yearINCOME INCREASE 2% /yearPROPERTY VALUE INCREASEYear 1Year 2Year 5Year 10Year 15Year 20Year 30Total Annual Income$25,620.00$26,388.60$28,835.54$33,428.29$38,752.55$44,924.83$60,375.21Total Annual ExpensesOperating ExpensesMortgage Payment$20,328.97$15,766.60$4,562.37$20,801.97$16,239.60$4,562.37$22,307.82$17,745.45$4,562.37$25,134.21$20,571.84$4,562.37$28,410.77$23,848.40$4,562.37$32,209.20$27,646.83$4,562.37$41,717.40$37,155.03$4,562.37Total Annual Cashflow$5,291.03$5,586.63$6,527.71$8,294.08$10,341.78$12,715.62$18,657.81Cash on Cash ROI23.91%25.25%29.50%37.49%46.74%57.47%84.33%Property Value$71,400.00$72,828.00$77,285.66$85,329.61$94,210.78$104,016.32$126,795.31Equity$17,526.25$19,494.41$25,837.43$38,134.84$53,197.53$71,986.64$126,795.31Loan Balance$53,873.75$53,333.59$51,448.23$47,194.77$41,013.25$32,029.67$0.00Total Profit if Sold *-$1,449.73$6,062.22$30,895.02$80,784.39$143,073.13$220,258.21$432,774.81Annualized Total Return-6.55%12.87%19.10%16.62%14.34%12.71%10.60%

13 March 2018 | 3 replies
Actually, you may be interested in Martin Armstrong (economist & social scientist) at ArmstrongEconomics dot com and ZeroHedge dot com with Tyler Durden who both provide excellent coverage of the cycles of the markets and how population and economist go together.

21 March 2018 | 11 replies
Remember Fannie uses debt-to-income (DTI) but the commercial loan uses debt service coverage ratio (DSCR).
20 March 2018 | 15 replies
@Maria Marrero Dept Service Coverage Ratio or DSCR for short, is the amount of Net Operating Income ( NOI ), which does not include your mortgage, Divided by Total Dept Service (TDS) ( usually mortgage payments, equity loans ) so the formula is: DSCR=NOI/TDS.

31 March 2018 | 12 replies
I use cold calling to supplement some of my direct-mail - the leads are pretty good.

23 March 2018 | 4 replies
I would like to supplement my FT corporate income with this method of real estate investing.

22 March 2018 | 8 replies
I'm hoping that this would supplement some of my income so I can be more and more selective with what projects that I want to do in my business and allow me more time to do more creative work.

15 March 2018 | 6 replies
They provided other supplemental income documentation, but since the income is from a side job, the total differs from month to month.

31 March 2022 | 9 replies
I am under contract in KC and shopping around for coverage.
15 March 2018 | 1 reply
Home insurance is a function of coverage amount, not home price, so what service/calculator/website do you guys use to quickly estimate this number?