
8 September 2019 | 16 replies
(Mine is actually floating at a solid 75% of washer revenue) so dryers at 75% would be = 1,148Making estimated monthly income in this scenario= $2,675Obviously this method has flaws, such as if 50% of customers use the $4 washers, it may result in a higher or lower income, but it is a pretty easy method to quickly calculate an estimate of income, also the owner can’t claim more income than he has water usage, for example if all customers in this scenario used the $4 washers and he had a 100% dryer to washer income rate his nearly max income would be, $4,444 per month, so if he claims 6k you can check that water bill and be like “uh-uh”!

8 September 2020 | 23 replies
Use ETFs, real estate, classic cars or whatever floats your boat.

5 September 2014 | 245 replies
Market cap rates in the core Seattle area float about 5% +/- 1% and have stayed there for nearly 2 decades.

22 November 2016 | 47 replies
We are tower controlled and also escort float planes on trailers down the highway to launch them onto the river.

8 November 2023 | 6 replies
It seems the person responsible for speaking with the tenants didn't want the stress of confrontation, so he just floated the repair costs on the PM's own account and kicked the can way down the road...Here's where it gets really interesting.

18 March 2017 | 47 replies
I'd argue it's the world floating on a sea of liquidity...is that sustainable?

6 November 2023 | 8 replies
This article is worth your time:‘Don’t screw up your life with an Airbnb’: Dave Ramsey didn’t mince words when this North Carolina woman floated the idea of refinancing her home to buy a vacation rental — here’s why (msn.com)

9 March 2016 | 66 replies
They are all important and cash flow keeps the ship floating in turbulent waters while appreciation and equity happen over time

20 November 2014 | 4 replies
I've floated about 18k on a credit card until the commercial loan closes on one of the properties.It looks like there might be some cheap properties near you:http://www.realtor.com/realestateandhomes-search/B...

2 March 2020 | 5 replies
Typical terms I get are 25% down of the purchase,100% rehab, 0 points, 20 year term. 5% fixed for the first 5 years and then floats with prime after that.Good luck!