
17 November 2013 | 8 replies
Mind you I am no accountant nor attorney but let's just say I have some government insight.However if you are the employee / member / corporate officer (with no other employees in the company outside of the member(s) corp. ofcr(s)) you may not have to file quarterly tax returns and just claim that income when you file your personal / business returns by 4/15.

22 November 2013 | 6 replies
Calm before the storm perhaps...http://www.biggerpockets.com/renewsblog/2013/11/04/home-prices-rise-sharply-major-cities-241/Let's see what occurs next month when its the end of the quarter as well as the end of the year....Kudos,Mary

29 November 2013 | 16 replies
Home prices have stabilized and dropped a little due to being the 4th quarter.

27 November 2013 | 16 replies
There is also a quarterly unofficial BP meetup in Woburn in December which will be another easy one.

25 November 2013 | 8 replies
End of quarter and end of year to get LPNs, NPNs and REOs off of the books is what all of the banks(big and small) do with gusto.
30 November 2013 | 2 replies
The property is situated, not in crack city but neither in best quarters in Buffalo.

2 December 2013 | 5 replies
I was looking at a retirement city that has 25% vacancy rate.Here is some other data:-population 21k-population growth 14% (since 2000)-median sales price 129k-year-over-year return -12%-quarter-over-quarter -14%-sales price 5 years ago 192k-2006 sales price 270K-median rent listed 1250$ (-22% change since a year ago)I like the fact that there's definitely room to grow (between 2006 price and current), however I am concerned about 25% vacancy rate and decreasing rents.

5 December 2013 | 16 replies
You're also "discriminating" against smokers, people without cars to park in the garage, and people with no quarters for laundry.

6 February 2014 | 21 replies
Some lenders want quarterly payment, Interesting statment...

8 December 2013 | 12 replies
After we concluded we wanted to retain this tenant we proposed an 15-month plan to get them to market rent: an initial rent increase of $50, followed by a $25 increase each subsequent quarter until we arrived at market rent.