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4 April 2024 | 1 reply
Temple university is an interesting market and right now is facing lots of surplus of inventory and falling prices both in rent and sales price.
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4 April 2024 | 5 replies
I’m not concerned with a cover that would support a vehicle since any vehicle would not get close enough for a tire to fall through.
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4 April 2024 | 12 replies
I am planning to attend Cal Poly SLO in the fall and majoring in finance.
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3 April 2024 | 12 replies
Folks just have to realize NO money up front and especially.I wish BP would be able to tag the American Greed episode on REmington financial and tag Ingrid Robinsons website .. these were classic cases of fake lenders.. with Ingrid being the victim and taking down Remington who had been doing this for over 20 years.. those guys had some cajones they took Due Diligence and deposit money for all those years but never over 10k so anyone complaining it would not go anywhere.. it was said on the show that in all those years they closed no more than 3 or 5 loans.. both the principals got major prison time.the issue today is most of these folks are hiding on the internet or are off shore very tough to catch and your not getting any funding or money back thats a given.
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4 April 2024 | 4 replies
Or, a charging order may be granted.If you're going the umbrella insurance route, perhaps see if it will cover you for several things including just the routine slip and fall (like mold or earthquake).
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4 April 2024 | 6 replies
I'd increase the max allowable each year because chances are with caps on rent increases, you will quickly fall further behind.
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3 April 2024 | 6 replies
My main concern is I want to make sure I offset any liability in perhaps the slim instance a tenant tries to sue me for potentially slipping and falling themselves or for whatever possible reason really.
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4 April 2024 | 15 replies
Which can cause higher risk of the deal falling through if any of those parties fail to perform.
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3 April 2024 | 5 replies
So add 0.25-0.5% for a high LTV, another 0.625% for 2-4 unit and 1.0% for high balance (I assume this falls into the high balance category) and you're right around the rate you were quoted.
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3 April 2024 | 3 replies
So there are a few ways to look at this, the 1st question is are you sure your renovation’s will double the property value, most renovations on primary residences, your lucky to get 60-70% of the dollar cost back out upon sale, so really nail down your comps, than you have basically a math problem if your rate on your primary goes up how long if ever before that extra payment is more than 400k in taxes, that’s just a simple calculation to help you decide, but I suspect you actually have a different question here, from a purely financial perspective my guess is the best option is to do anything to avoid that tax hit, but one of the reasons to make money is to spend it on things that you enjoy, based on your overall financial picture and a subjective view of how much enjoyment you will get out of a renovated home, you should decide if you want to roll your profit into another deal or “cash-out” your winnings, I love cars and I’m willing to spend more than is fiscally smart on them because they bring me joy, there is nothing wrong with that, but i don’t think it’s a fiscally smart choice, without knowing your exact property id imagine a renovation would fall into that category, so that’s the terms I would use to decide.