
19 July 2012 | 20 replies
Then you'll need to decide how much work was involved in getting those sales, value that work and subtract that from that expected net income over time.

7 August 2014 | 12 replies
If you are calculating you cash flow then yes, you would need to subtract it along with other all the other expenses.I've met quite a few musicians on BP!

11 August 2014 | 24 replies
If they are $1,050 per month or $12,600 per year subtract taxes and insurance. $12,600 - $2,000 (estimate) = $10,600.

11 August 2014 | 7 replies
some owners are really pissed at the whole system and the fact that they put down 5%, spent X amount in remodeling and now ..somebody is buying the place for 20c on a $. ...so before they leave ...they might decide to "subtract" some value ...concrete poured into plumbing, ripped off whatever can be sold, cabinets gone etc ...so buy ONLY at a huge discount assuming its a total rehab. if a place is bought unseen. ...pull comps in the area ..and figure you need to spend e.g. 50K for full gut rehab. then figure is it still worth it ..whats the going rate in the area ...as far as owners ...if they see you ..they figure they face the person now ..not the system. it might be good or bad ...many unknowns.

11 August 2014 | 1 reply
ENGLISH Mensa Invitational - for lexophilesThe Washington Post's Mensa Invitational once again invited readers to take any word from the dictionary, alter it by adding, subtracting, or changing one letter, and supply a new definition.
14 August 2014 | 31 replies
Subtract plowing, planting, seed costs, fertilizer, herbicides, fungicides, harvesting, transport, and sales fees you might scrape $10-$50 an acre if you can find someone to take pity on you and not charge you a fortune to do the work.

28 August 2014 | 25 replies
Determine after repaired value of the property and subtract your profit, holding costs and repairs.

21 August 2014 | 1 reply
That is subtracting the current equity from both acquisition and sale.

29 August 2014 | 12 replies
My current understanding of the situation is that I am eligible for Pay As You Earn repayment and Public Service Loan Forgiveness, which means that I would just have to put 10% of my discretionary income (income left over after subtracting 150% of the poverty level) towards my loans for 10 years and then they'll be wiped away.

18 December 2014 | 15 replies
They've (Fannie) also reduced their risk by factoring in 25% of expenses which doesn't account for taxes and insurance either because when you take 75% of gross rents you're still subtracting it from principal and interest, taxes, insurance, and assessments through the "PITIA."