
6 January 2015 | 10 replies
Figure out the daily rental amount and multiply it by the number of days the tenants will occupy the property.

17 July 2014 | 25 replies
Now figure your gross rents and multiply by the GRM and you have a market value.

22 August 2012 | 4 replies
Then count the tabs from the bottom to the top and multiply by 5, then divide by 12.

22 January 2015 | 27 replies
There are good folks, seems like the bad apples are multiplying or they are just more obvious.

26 February 2016 | 12 replies
Multiply that by number of units and 12 months and divide that by the purchase price of the property and you have your cap rate.

24 January 2016 | 18 replies
You used the term GRM which I took to mean Gross Rent Multiplier.
14 December 2015 | 12 replies
Well, I only believe a seller when they tell me something negative, then I multiply the matter 10 fold.

10 April 2017 | 26 replies
The rent multiplier figure provided by broker is 7.18 and Cap rate is 10.35.

21 June 2019 | 18 replies
There are faster ways to multiply equity, but they come with more risk.Here is my biased pro/con list for syndication vs SFR/small multis.

21 June 2019 | 4 replies
Clifford, this comes up a lot on BP, so it's worth your time to research what else has been written.Short answer: leverage allows you to scale faster and multiplies your returns at the "cost" of more risk and restrictions (e.g., meeting lender underwriting requirements).Something to keep in mind: you can buy cash and then finance later.