William Coet
Why Does the Big-Money Invest In Landlord Unfriendly Cities?
30 October 2024 | 35 replies
@William Coet it’s a different business model altogether.I love highly desirable areas that attract highly skilled high income college educated workforces.They tend to be more liberal and therefore the landlord tenant laws.The percent of their income that goes to rent is typically much less than 20% so a rental increase of 5-10% is nothing to them.They are typically lower cap rate areas and therefore every dollar of net operating income that is earned is explosive to the underlying asset value.
Vivian Butler
Just Staring Out
27 October 2024 | 3 replies
They are in it for an easy buck and will throw you under the bus if it means they can earn some money.
Alan Asriants
Is this an end to Wholesaling?
30 October 2024 | 236 replies
And then you split commissions with agents and have a cap limiting what you can earn on each transaction regardless of the deal you struck.
Matthew Nelson
Prop manager adjusting ledger 18 months later
26 October 2024 | 4 replies
Any monies in escrow - advanced rent and/or security deposits, are not earned yet.
Collin Reichelt
Building a team
25 October 2024 | 4 replies
Are you giving them the promise to use them in future deals where they will earn 3%?
Manson C.
Is Cashout Refinance is a Good Exit Strategy?
28 October 2024 | 10 replies
Hi,People always talk about how they purchase a rental property, wait a few years for it to appreciate, do a cashout refi to recoup their initial down payment, then whatever they earn in the future is infinite return.But in reality, how is this truly a "recouping of initial investment" when you have to pay a 4.5% interest to take out the cashout proceeds (with $3000-4000 of closing costs on top)?
Michael Rost
Jackson, MS long-term buy and hold
31 October 2024 | 25 replies
So for us in the bizz it worked great those were high earning years for me so I bought what 3 to 4 million of them and got 1.5 to 2 mil deduction off of my top line income.
Brian Scott
Refi question FHA to Conventional
24 October 2024 | 9 replies
Compounding interest will far out earn for you what you could be saving by paying off your mortgage quickly.
Josh Cochran
Western Wealth Capital: What do you know about them?
31 October 2024 | 37 replies
It looks to me like you would be essentially giving WWC a loan to be paid back through the property's earnings or a refy or a sale...and then you would get 65% of all proceeds after you get your invested capital back...Most syndications I have seen, the sponsors offers a preferred return (6-8%) on the investors' capital until the capital gets repaid in full.
Joseph Fenner
How do I buy 10 rental properties in 1 year?
30 October 2024 | 94 replies
There is 3 primary components, ingredients, required to achieve such elevation of self in financial success your speaking of.