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Results (1,331)
Marvin Michel Update: Bought a new property...Now trying to navigate the rehab
6 February 2022 | 2 replies
The estimate for the initial repair came back at about $6,500, and it involved repairing the rear wall cracks with urethane injection.
Anthony Buccanero Newbie Wife and Husband Investor Team
18 June 2021 | 14 replies
You need to reinvest in your portfolio with all proceeds and probably inject additional capital as available (plus having reserves or credit you can tap if a big cap ex comes up).
James R Dean Fair share with financing partner
25 May 2021 | 24 replies
The structure you are looking at works fine so long as the asset generates sufficient cash to cover expenses; however, as all RE investors know, the unexpected furnace malfunction or roof failure requires injection of outside capital. 
Mike Bianchi What to do with 700,000 ? Pay down , leverage or stocks
10 June 2021 | 76 replies
any ball park idea what type of tax savings would be on that kind of injection .
Kristina Zuniga Sell or Rent Home: what is better long term?
6 July 2021 | 3 replies
If you want to "inject" money every year to hold a rental by all means go for it.
Mike M. How do you calculate cash on cash return on refinance
8 July 2021 | 2 replies
After initial acquisition of property its easy at:Excess annual cashflow / initial equity injection So let’s say you guys a property:$100,000 down on a $500,000 property, resulting in a $400,000 loan with the property throwing off $10,000 a year in excess CF after all expenses and mortgage payments.
Demetrius Brown How Have Apartments Prevailed During the Pandemic
17 July 2021 | 0 replies
Looking ahead, investors will continue to inject funds into apartment assets as a winning bet to yield successful returns over the long-term.
Jorge Martinez Just starting out, Rental Investment.
18 July 2021 | 1 reply
You can usually reduce that risk of a contract for deed by injecting a no encumbrances clause on the title, into the contract.
Parker Boling [Calc Review] Help me analyze this deal
21 July 2021 | 1 reply
You’re getting in for a really decent price, injecting tons of equity and it cash flows handsomely.
Ben C. Joint Venture with Contractor?
25 August 2021 | 0 replies
Essentially it would work something like this…1) My LLC purchases the property 2) He will only charge me COST on the labor and materials (no profit or markups) which will save me around 30% on regular contract figure he gives me in my market which is very expensive 3) He will also make 300k of his own liquidity available to inject into the deal (I will put some of my own cash in and get a HML loan for the rest).