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11 January 2025 | 420 replies
MYTH: transferring debt to heloc will pay Debt off soonerBUSTED!
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3 February 2025 | 47 replies
Deduct NEW property taxes after you buyDeduct home insurance costsDeduct maintenance percentage, typically 10%Deduct vacancy+tenant nonperformance percentage(we recommend 5% for Class A, 10% Class B, 20% Class C, good luck with Class D)Deduct whatever dollar/percentage of cashflow you wantNow, what you have left over is the amount for debt service.Enter it into a mortgage calculator, with current interest rate for an investment property, to determine your maximum mortgage amount.Divide the mortgage amount by either 75% or 80%, depending on the required down payment percentage - this is your tentative price to offer.If the property needs repairs, you'll want to deduct 110%-120% of the estimated repairs from this amount.Be sure to also research the ARV and make sure it's 10-20% higher than your tentative purchase price.As long as the ARV checks out, this is the purchase price to offer.It is probably significantly below the asking price.
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12 February 2025 | 43 replies
Since you haven't closed/went to settlement yet, one option is to have your title company draw up assumption paperwork.
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31 January 2025 | 8 replies
For instance if this is a $10M portfolio that's levered with loans totaling $9.1M, there's no equity that can be pulled but if this is a $1M portfolio with $100K of debt, its a different story.
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13 January 2025 | 8 replies
If you have a lot of equity and little cash flow, you should consider accessing that equity to use elsewhere.Another factor to consider is your interest rate on the debt.
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12 January 2025 | 6 replies
To Sum it up, its a good idea if you can exceed the cost of capital (higher rate than your cost of debt) with what you earn on your heloc/debt you pull out and invest.The question is how much gains above is enough to substantiate the risk of your variable interest rate, well thats up to your personal investing criteria.
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13 January 2025 | 2 replies
How much weight do you give to the cash flow benefit of cheap debt when the property is priced above market?
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23 January 2025 | 5 replies
Eliminate debt, establish a budget, and save.
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11 January 2025 | 12 replies
A good DST would absorb the rest of your debt nicely.