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Results (4,711+)
Mark Douglas Please HELP!! Property Management Nightmare
7 January 2009 | 11 replies
Many times fraud allows you to seek multipliers of the actual damages you suffer, it is usually treble, meaning 3x.
Matthew Stover Help me understand this deal and 50%, 2% rule
28 November 2012 | 83 replies
You have the rent there as $300, but I believe that the correct amount should be $100; if you were to multiply the offer number on the per $50 line by 2, you would end up with that offer amount shown on the $300 line (more or less), but that would have been at $100 rent since we just multiplied by 2.And every line below that is also off by $200 in that original chart if my computation above was accurate.Please post back if you agree or disagree with my finding on this.If you are wondering how I discovered this, I had one I looked at recently where rent was $1000, and offer limit was around $70K for 7% rate; comparing that to the chart shows a big difference.
David Dachtera Anyone using Square Point-of-Sale to collect rents?
9 October 2016 | 54 replies
How does 3.5% get multiplied to 14%?...
Lorin K. What is your thought on renting out rooms to renters?
10 October 2016 | 8 replies
Multiply that by 4 or 6 folks or more living in a home (and yes, staff must be present at all times but nursing staff are generally nursing assistants, often paid a bit above the minimum wage; perhaps $10 per hour in my area)  and you can understand why this is a money making project for folks running such places.Thus, a landlord who agrees to rent out a unit to someone wishing to run a residential home out of it might wish to consider this when setting the rent for this owner.Maintenance would depend on how many residents would be residing there. 
Miqdad Abubakar Property Investment in today's modern world
21 June 2022 | 0 replies
So, we’ll leave the discussion about ROA and ROE for another time.The Formula for Calculating ROIGiven our previous points, the next step will be using the real estate ROI formula in practice and seeing how it is calculated:To calculate your return on investment, you essentially need to divide the amount of money you’ve earned from the investment—commonly known as your net profit—by the cost of the investment and then multiply that by a 100.Here’s the formula outlined:ROI = (Net Profit / Cost of Investment) x 100 It’s worth noting that there’s another way of calculating the ROI:ROI = (Present Value – Cost of Investment / Cost of Investment) x 100 Now that you get the foundations of the formula, how do you use it?
Andrey Y. How to determine how many investment properties to buy
9 March 2015 | 277 replies
Replicating that over and over multiplies the losses.  
Darius Kellar My Thoughts On Podcast 331. Detroit Rentals With Ashley Hamilton!
20 December 2019 | 81 replies
It makes for a boring show to listen to people who bought 100k houses in California and waited for the market to turn so they can multiply their portfolio.
Waylan Liu Understanding Return on Equity and when to Cash Out Refi?
26 November 2020 | 22 replies
How is this multiplied to maximum effect?
Kris Marmol Best Contingencies for LLC operating agreement
4 June 2019 | 3 replies
(We use a 'rent multiplier formula', 100 times rent, to value properties)What if a partner dies?
Reid Hanley Valuing a Mobile Home Park purchase based solely on Rental Income
2 November 2018 | 9 replies
Would anyone here buy an all POH MHP based solely on a rental income multiplier?