Babu George
subject to and lease options
29 January 2015 | 4 replies
for example:Property Value: $100kSeller Mortgage: $100Kyou obtain the property on a subject2, you then turn around and sell with a wrap with the following:Sale Price: $110K (premium due to owner financing)Down Payment: $20KYou then carry a note for $90K that the buyer must pay offYou then apply $10k of the down payment to the wrapped lender, bringing the wrapped mortgage balance down to $90K, the same amount as the note you are carrying.In addtion to all that, the terms on the new note are created to give you a spread between the wrapped PITI & the buyers PITI (assuming that taxes & insurance are escrowed in).So, after the closing you have created (and extracted) $10K (minus any closing costs) in equity from the deal, and you also are now receiving monthly cash flow via your note and you have no property upkeep.DISCLAIMER: I have never done one of these, this is all academic.
Seth Williams
What makes someone a real estate "Guru"?
5 June 2015 | 52 replies
So they don't really compete with each other, but rather work in a format of trying to extract every possible cent from the collective email lists of everyone in this sordid little fraternity.
Kenneth Estes
Collecting Tenant Balances
8 April 2014 | 11 replies
The typical scenario is they will pay the costs to file the motions to collect with bank levy or wage garnishment etc. and then start to try and extract money.
Kenny Tan
Duplex - is it better not to sell?
15 May 2012 | 4 replies
My rationale - since I purchased this property at a much lower price, the real cost to me equals to what I can extract out of it by selling.)
Jeremy D.
Quitting the day job to do REI full time
28 May 2012 | 21 replies
NOte - keep things that you find interesting - that is what a business is partly about.In summary, sharpen your job to cut your hours or boring tasks to extract maximum salary and benefits and enjoyment.
Tom Dewit
foreign investor looking to invest in SFR in Atlanta, GA or Charlotte, NC
3 April 2016 | 8 replies
No C- or D areas.Considering the rule-of-thumb of subtracting 50% of the gross rent tocover expenses, and considering that I need at least 10% NOI, I am looking for properties with 20% gross rental income.I would buy cash, and see later if i can get the Fanny Mae delayed financing to extract cash back out of the property to be able to buy more properties.Any suggestions?
Al Williamson
If Steve Jobs was a Landlord - iHousing
13 June 2012 | 26 replies
Extracting lessons from both camps would be very instructive - but for the sake of time - let's only consider his fans.His fans believe Jobs cared about them and are more than happy to be apart of his tribe.
Frank Apap
Thoughts & Recommendations - Financing New Construction
17 September 2012 | 2 replies
How much of that $300K in equity you can extract depends on the value of the house.
Jeff S.
They like turnover
23 September 2012 | 21 replies
It points directly to conflicts of interest and non-aligned incentives that owners and PM's always potentially have (particularly those PMs running in-house maintenance operations from which they extract profit directly tied to the amount of usage).You did qualify that by saying they're doing the same with their own units, and I can relate to the idea of trying to push your building into a higher rental tier, which will likely involve removing your lower-tier tenants who likely wouldn't qualify at the higher tier.
N/A N/A
Need help figuring out these deals
17 June 2009 | 9 replies
Not sure how much actual cash you'll be able to extract.