
27 September 2013 | 5 replies
To the extent reasonably available, the Association will maintain property insurance insuring against all risks of direct physical loss commonly insured against, including fire and extended coverage, in a total amount of at least 80 percent of the replacement cost or actual cash value of the insured property as of the effective date and at each renewal date of the policy, for the individual Units, for insurable Limited Common Element improvements, for insurable General Common Element improvements, and for insurable Areas of Common Responsibility improvements, but will not maintain any property insurance for alterations, additions, improvements, and betterments made by, or acquired at the expense of, and individual Owner or a Resident to the Owner's Unit, a Limited Common Element improvement assigned thereto, a General Common Element improvement or an Area of Common Responsibility improvement."

30 September 2013 | 7 replies
And in general, the further out you earn money, the less that money is worth compared to having that money today.NPV takes a series of cash-flows (money made at different points in time between now and the end of the investment) and translates the value of the money made at future times into today's dollar's.

1 October 2013 | 3 replies
I believe that some of the sales skills learned as a recruiter can translate very favorably to REI.

1 October 2013 | 4 replies
That at least translates into spending HOA money and perhaps a special assessment.
6 January 2015 | 8 replies
This field is different in Canada than in the USA so not everything I have learned will translate.

16 October 2013 | 27 replies
I'm hoping my obsession with process improvement will translate well into my REI career.

13 November 2013 | 10 replies
In my case I'm curious how well estimating rehab costs in California might translate to estimating rehab costs in Texas or Arizona.

20 October 2013 | 17 replies
'Company A' had no employees, no assets, and appears to be the alter-ego of 'Parent of A'.Text: http://www.llclawmonitor.com/uploads/file/Soroof.pdf

11 October 2013 | 15 replies
They are a little pricier on the front end, but would translate into utility savings for you or your tenants, which should translate into increased rent for you.If you must stick w/ a gas water heater, and you either have a water softener, or don't have hard water, consider an 'on-demand' water heater.

15 October 2013 | 26 replies
An investor can find the loan assets that will carry enough of a discount that may allow for a larger rehab event which can translate into better margins, but those tend to come with a bit more issues in title or borrower and disposition in general.As suggested browse some topics on the asset class and get some education on the matter.