7 April 2021 | 0 replies
Is that price multiplied by the total building square footage or are there exclusives to the equation?

8 April 2021 | 13 replies
Take the average of about 5 properties and multiply that by the square feet of your property that you are analyzing.

9 April 2021 | 4 replies
For a $300,000 loan amount, multiply it by 0.0085 and that will be the amount for the year and then divide by 12 for a monthly payment.

11 April 2021 | 5 replies
.- If no earnings- Since the conversion is of the non-deductible contribution, the prorate rule is not required-If there are earnings on the nondeductible contributions before the backdoor contribution of these amounts to a Roth IRA, then a portion of the amount distributed from the traditional IRA would be includible in gross income (as per the exclusion ratio for IRA distributions), under which the excludable portion of the IRA distributions for the year is determined by multiplying (1) the amount of the distributions by (2) the ratio of (a) nondeductible contributions, over: (b) the sum of (i) the aggregate balance of all the individual's traditional IRAs on the last day of the tax year, (ii) the sum of all IRA distributions for the year, (iii) outstanding rollovers, and (iv) amounts converted to a Roth IRA from a traditional IRA, SEP, and SIMPLE IRAs.

14 April 2021 | 4 replies
Purchase price: 283,000Rent: $1,350 per unit Appraisal: $270,000The duplex was vacant at the time of the appraisal and the estimated 1,075 per unit and came to the appraisal amount of $270k by multiplying the estimated rent by 125 (average Gross Rent Multiplier).A) since I have successfully filled both sides of the duplex with tenant paying $1,350, is there anyway I can capitalize on the presumed equity this could add?

13 April 2021 | 4 replies
It’s the amount that your capital, or your equity, will be multiplied over the course of the projected hold time.

14 April 2021 | 2 replies
DTI is calculated by adding up all of your monthly bills and dividing it by your monthly income before taxes, then, multiplying it times 100.

16 April 2021 | 4 replies
A 2% property is going to be high risk, combine that with the inherent risk of investing long distance, and those 2 things wont multiply each othet, they will be exponential.
22 April 2021 | 8 replies
Going further out of LA and OC, the numbers looked way better but it occurred to me that I would just have too many properties (one day) and that just multiplies the time and stress so I'm aiming to stay closer to home even though it will take longer and cost more.

13 May 2021 | 2 replies
What you will need to know is the number of occupied spaces, the monthly lot rent amount at the park, and the cap rate.First, multiply the number of occupied spaces by the monthly lot rent (lot rent ONLY, so if there are homes rented, only include the lot rent amount for each of those spaces) and then multiply by 12 months to arrive at the gross annual income.Next, subtract the expenses (they can range from 30-50% based on the variables mentioned above, so it's best to use 40% for this quick evaluation).