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26 April 2019 | 14 replies
The only way I would consider what you are proposing is if the equity from your coop is enough to place enough of downpayment (think 50% of purchase price) on a small multifamily (think 3-4 family) so that the income from the new property is enough to cover all expenses of the new property as well as the loan (or a significant percentage thereof) on your personal residence.It's a gamble that can break you or be the beginnings of your real estate portfolio.
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9 February 2021 | 11 replies
So, if withholding distributions in order to protect your investor's capital is necessary, I would fully support that.Having the support of you partners is of utmost importance, which highlights the importance of effective communication, regardless of the chosen strategy regarding distribution adjustments.With those points established, I have continued to receive distributions and that has strengthened my confidence in my partners. 1) Buy for cash flow, 2) secure long-term, low leveraged debt, and 3) have adequate cash reserves are principles that guide the business.
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16 October 2022 | 2 replies
Ours were plausible triplexes BUT there was a bit of a gamble involved.
11 August 2022 | 51 replies
Very few have been operated as a business...most are, at best, a hobby, where the Owner enjoys doing handyman work (often of dubious quality), at worst, an absolute "investment" Gamble, with no regard for tenants, laws, or much of anything but spending the absolute minimum while collecting the most money possible until their "cash cow" implodes.
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31 October 2021 | 17 replies
It also seems like a huge gamble to operate if I don't know quite for sure the variables involved to make a place have 33% occupancy rate on the year vs 75% occupancy rate on the year.
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7 September 2020 | 16 replies
If you wing it you will fail.According to (my) data with my selected assumptions, up to $5K spend on mailers is a gamble.
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24 November 2022 | 4 replies
I'm not an acct so you should talk with whoever your chosen professional is, but the interest can be deducted against whatever the actual use of the funds is.
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24 November 2022 | 13 replies
Most investors buy to make money, it seems you want to buy for the sake of doing a deal.perhaps you just want the appreciation and you'll pay the bills with your career income, just know that's gambling and we are in an appreciation slump for potentially a few years.
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18 November 2022 | 12 replies
I'm not saying that you should pursue something as a speculative gamble, but simply evaluate a realistic perspective of where the market is headed.