
6 September 2014 | 23 replies
In 2009-2010 when prices had plunged the risk of the market had greatly decreased .

29 August 2014 | 4 replies
I wouldn't decrease the number of bedrooms.

30 August 2014 | 5 replies
Under RESPA, is it legal for the lender's credit (line 802 on HUD) to be decreased?

4 September 2014 | 4 replies
I agree that my expenses could be refined above, and I have the hard numbers to support the cost associated with these units but I understood the 50% rule as being an ultra conservative metric that would cover CAPEX+Insurance, taxes, vacancies, etc...Also, the 100K is included in the loan payment but would likely not be financed, making the loan payment decrease.

14 September 2014 | 10 replies
As your equity increases, even when your net returns increase, you often find your return on the equity decreases.

10 June 2017 | 16 replies
You get 75 mortgage and you get your money back- You make money in the spread between rent and mortgage and you have 75 to invest again- every 6 months you buy a property reinvesting and refinancing the same 75- meanwhile the properties you initially purchased increased in value and your mortgage balance decreased ... 1 to 5 years later (depending on the market increase) you can refinance again on the same houses...

15 September 2014 | 2 replies
Is there a deprecation method utilized where the life of the building decreases with time (i.e.

17 September 2014 | 3 replies
Depending on how bad it is, I would anticipate higher vacancy and possible decrease in rents.

17 September 2014 | 6 replies
Richard, this depends on your risk tolerance and whether or not your property will still cash flow after the cash out.Personally, I prefer to leave some equity in the property, to be tapped in case of personal hardship or if rents should decrease significantly in the future.

18 September 2014 | 25 replies
Your capital will be expensive at first, but as you grow your investor base you can decrease the cost of capital and structure the deals in a more profitable way.