
5 September 2019 | 3 replies
Leave some meat on the bone for them so it has a 5% to 6% cap rate after paying all expenses including management.
30 June 2019 | 6 replies
I know that there is plenty of meat on the bone for an investor.

28 June 2019 | 2 replies
Wholesalers not leaving much meat on the bone and they are still able to move their properties.

28 June 2019 | 11 replies
They routinely do a bare bones title search only for recorded liens.
1 July 2019 | 3 replies
Bones will still be good, roof has already been replaced, along with carpets once or twice.

10 January 2022 | 89 replies
Som bullet-points below:Acquisition Price: $19,750,000Sale Price: $28,700,00Unit Count: 164Hold Period: 22 monthsStarting Revenue: $121,000Ending Revenue: $179,000Renovations Completed: 80 units + Office, Gym, Pool, Playground, Bark ParkReturn to Partners: 1.5x; 25% IRRThere was clearly more value-add left in the deal, but we'd hit our hurdles and thought it'd be better to move the equity into a property with more meat on the bone.

29 June 2019 | 9 replies
Rafters are just wood that the builders cut on sight, they involve a ridge beam (think back bone) and the individual rafters (think ribs).
1 July 2019 | 19 replies
I personally am not afraid of cosmetic work if the bones of the place are good.
30 June 2019 | 9 replies
Not enough meat on the bone to account for any hiccups, going over budget, unforeseen issues with the property.

5 July 2019 | 2 replies
However, these points (below) tend to tell me what to do with a structure:1) Are the "bones" (wood framing) of the home worth saving?