
21 February 2024 | 94 replies
That was not the intention.Let's just say that all of the Universities that have financial degrees, other professional degrees such as CCIM, CFAs, etc. all need to understand these calculations.It's a requirement for these degrees and designations.What I am saying is that learning the IRR is really NOT hard at all, whether or not you believe it will help you, the evidence does point to the ability to have this particular calculation as one of the best tools in your financial tool box.The problem here is that if those of us who really understand the calculation of IRR can clearly show that Positive, Negative, Neutral cash flows, Zero, Negative or Positive Appreciation, etc. can all be taken into account with one calculation and regardless, it can be proven mathematically that there are enough scenarios to dispute the theory that only Positive Cash Flow Properties are the safest and highest returns for an Investment.I'm hoping that there are at least a few people reading this thread will want to investigate it, but having people say that HEY...

5 May 2016 | 40 replies
A properly wired sub-panel has ground and neutral wiring that remains separate; this is a key distinction from a main panel that ties directly to the service line from the electric company, where the bus bars are used interchangeably for ground and neutral.

6 August 2018 | 75 replies
this PDX market built 8 to 10 thousand new door homes a year from early 90s to 2007.. 2008 700 permits total next year about 1500 next year 3k and so on.. so by the time the banks started doing spec lending here about 4 years ago and demand never diminished we found ourselves with a critical housing shortage and all the big national builders moved in because they can self fund.. us little guys were stuck.. with lack of market liquidity.. so anyway I have gotten about 100 homes built in the last 5 years personally and all have made profit not as good as Charleston but still a profit and much easier than flix and flip... which I used to do a ton of but don't do much or any anymore the new builds are far more predictable and I have NO where near the competition from smaller investors.. that competition is squarely in the fix and flip space.. and is brutal in this area.what this also did when new construction halted and once things stabilized coming out of 2012 or so. rents went up 50 to 100% so landlords we held through the down turn PDX even though it was a neutral cash flow market or typical west coast low cap market some of those guys have killed it..

16 September 2018 | 20 replies
Even S8 tenants don't seem to destroy tile, and you can have the same tile in place for 20 years if you put in a nice neutral color.

3 May 2016 | 13 replies
Keep in mind that this almost always happens in a somewhat neutral environment (listing agents office).

20 December 2020 | 14 replies
If yes, then you have a good indication of a loose neutral wire.

2 March 2021 | 6 replies
Some Cities have courts that are more pro tenant, some Cities have more neutral courts.

6 May 2013 | 17 replies
As a side comment, remember to be most effective, dress neutrally and leave your cell phone on silent when talking with people so they feel you are 100% present during conversations.

19 April 2016 | 1 reply
Instead of trying to do everything right by renovating a fixer-upper, it would've been a lot easier to buy something that was already done and just not make any mistakes (do preventative maintenance, keep the house painted neutral colors etc.) and just wait a few years for the market to do its work.

5 April 2017 | 41 replies
I purchased the property and painted it a more neutral gray, fixed some of the warn down baseboards, replaced some really ugly window fixtures and stained the kitchen cabinets a natural wood color (all in around $4k of work some self performed some contracted).