
2 January 2016 | 6 replies
How would cashflow producing real estate ever decrease taxable income?

5 January 2016 | 15 replies
So all the properties wash out to roughly the same profitability.Note that I don't want to purchase properties that require any rehab first, because all that does is increase my investment, decrease my leverage, and therefore decrease my cash-on-cash and ROI.SO NOW I CONSIDER OTHER FINANCING.

10 January 2016 | 9 replies
Remember there will be tax advantages to owning as well, which will decrease your taxable income.

22 January 2016 | 18 replies
That can help decrease confusion and misunderstanding.

24 March 2016 | 36 replies
Also did it this way in hopes of decreasing the chance of the bank calling the loan due.

8 January 2016 | 18 replies
We didn't have nice and neat graphs, but we could feasibly track a particular set of properties and show you whether or not prices have increased or decreased over the years.

7 January 2016 | 2 replies
Meaning that a savvy investor buying cash-flow-positive properties according to the above math will continually have their DTI *decrease* as they buy more and more investment properties.

8 January 2016 | 10 replies
We all know decreasing tenant turnover helps the bottom line, so what extra free or low-cost things do you do to keep your good tenants happy?

12 January 2016 | 12 replies
That $300 a month gain increases the annual gross income by $3,600 (which should make the property worth about $30,000 or so more).Can you decrease the expenses?

17 November 2015 | 34 replies
--My gut feeling is that we won't see any decreases in real estate prices or activity this year and I'd guess that the price of oil will stabilize somewhere around $65 / barrel towards mid-Summer.