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13 April 2011 | 84 replies
That's exactly what Nick wrote, except with the implicit multiply operation made explicit and "/" instead of the ÷.Personally I tend to write code with an abundance of parenthesis just to avoid any arguments about what's going to happen or my intentions.
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8 September 2011 | 32 replies
If you dont have the money for one understand that their cost will be multiplied many times over by the mistakes youll make or the opportunity youll over look.
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19 November 2018 | 23 replies
(What I do is find out the square footage and multiply the square footage by $20 dollars for a complete over haul) 3.
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27 April 2021 | 7 replies
1) Accrued ratably means to multiply the total discount by the following fraction:(A) the number of days you hold the note, divided by(B) the number of days after the date you acquire the note and up to (and including) the date of its maturity.You take this amortized amount as ordinary income when you sell the note or you can elect to take a piece into income each year.
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6 August 2022 | 62 replies
We can calculate the approximate annualized numbers by multiplying the $954 rent by 12 months for the total gross annual income = $11,448.
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9 February 2014 | 2 replies
The 2% Rule is the same thing as using the 50% Rule and applying a 12% Cap Rate on the annual NOI.I was looking at some properties and noticed I got the same value using the 2% rule and using the 50% for an estimate of NOI and happened to be using a 12% Cap.Being a math dork I did write it out symbolically and they both reduce to the same mathematical equation (Which BTW is just multiply the monthly rent by 50).
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10 June 2015 | 22 replies
#6 Always multiply your fair market value by either .65, .70, or .80 to get a reasonable deal for yourself or to pass along to another real estate investor!!!!
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4 June 2016 | 10 replies
It's a force multiplier for building capital reserves to really get started on the right foot.
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29 June 2016 | 7 replies
However, if you're trying to scale, I think @Derek Jones is correct, sell and multiply!
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4 February 2015 | 8 replies
Then, multiply and divide by the 70% and subtract how much the repairs will cost?