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29 September 2019 | 114 replies
Class A Core Multifamily cap rates are too compressed, you will have to look at Class B and C properties to get a meaningful ROI above your debt costs2.
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22 August 2019 | 5 replies
RE investors do this all the time, buy some, keep some, plow some of the gains into building a passive portfolio.You want to continually revalue your holdings, and determine the opportunity cost of keeping a given property vs selling and buying something else (factoring in all the frictional costs, taxes, and time of buying and selling properties).Refinancing using higher appraisals and extracting your cash is nice as well, if you have good credit/income and willing local banks.
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2 January 2024 | 3 replies
Every counter party tries to extract maximum value from their transaction, seller may go under contract at $500k, but if he thinks value has gone up prior to closing, he wants more money, you can sue for $100k and 3 years to win, or pay him an extra $50k at closing.
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3 January 2024 | 5 replies
I rarely see any good content on here regarding traditional investing and I can hardly remember having a meaningful conversation about real estate investing with any of my advisor friends/acquaintances.
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21 November 2022 | 39 replies
In addition, it implies that there is no short-term extract of the trapped value; no way to re-use that investment in the near term.
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3 January 2024 | 5 replies
However if I do a BRRRR I can achieve infinite return by extracting all of my investment.
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5 September 2020 | 34 replies
On the other hand, if I tie up your property in exchange for peanuts without the resources or intention to buy your property, I will be able to extract an economic rent from a transaction in which I have no legal or a not unconscionable interest.
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16 July 2018 | 80 replies
But it could also be the case that it's flat-out inappropriate for someone who is just starting off investing and has no meaningful net worth to protect.
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30 September 2015 | 17 replies
Study up on "arbitrage", also.Here's what one of my mentors does: he uses private money and his corporate credit lines to acquire and fix-up properties, then refinances into a traditional loan to pay off his investors and credit lines as well as extracting part of his profit.
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14 December 2022 | 10 replies
@Kamal AndrawisThe only meaningful way to answer this question is for you guys to obtain bids from some local general contractors who specialize in multifamily properties.You might be able to find these guys with a little sleuthing.