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1 December 2024 | 21 replies
This is because they didn’t budget properly and rent wasn’t high enough to cover actual expenses (repairs and maintenance, cap ex, vacancy and loss, tenant damage and turnovers, etc don’t expect to have any money left over after all of these expenses are accounted for if the rent is less than $1,500/month).
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29 November 2024 | 6 replies
If you reported a lot of expenses and showed a loss, then the loss will be treated as a liability in DTI calculation.
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6 December 2024 | 12 replies
They can claim business overhead expenses, and they must file 1099s.REPS determines whether the resulting losses can be applied against your W2 income or not.
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1 December 2024 | 32 replies
While you shouldn’t categorize all tenants and it’s the landlords responsibility to properly screen, the tenants who reside in better situated housing and pay higher rents are more financially responsible meaning lower rate of rent loss and will generally take better care of the property which combined will result in less time allocated towards management functions if self-performed or more favorable management fee structures if 3rd party management companies are utilized (which ties back to #1, as well).
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5 December 2024 | 554 replies
Bitcoin hasn't completely become uncorrelated, I think when people are hedging risks, they will cut whatever losses, wherever they can.
2 December 2024 | 17 replies
The most likely scenario is that his renters will eventually do something that costs him a significant loss, despite cutting them a major break for so long.
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1 December 2024 | 68 replies
Second, the investment may have been made anticipating a chance of failure; for example an investment may correctly analyze that it has a 50% chance of a 25% ROI, a 35% chance of a 50% ROI, and a 15% chance of a 50% loss.
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26 November 2024 | 4 replies
Problem is only "RE pros" get to do it.There are 3 income classifications in the US - Active, Portfolio, and PassiveActive income is income derived from your job, or normal trade or business.Portfolio income is derived from bank instruments - stocks, bonds, etc.Passive income is income earned from investments.Active losses can wipe out both passive and portfolio income, but it doesn't work the other way around.Portfolio (capital) losses are limited to $3,000 annually.Passive losses can only be offset by passive gains.Real estate rental income by its nature is deemed passive per IRC Sec 469One way to get around it is to become a pro - spend more than 750 hours or 1/2 your time in real estate.But most folks aren't real estate pros.
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24 November 2024 | 10 replies
There's a high chance that you are feeling FOMO from the returns in public markets, sell your houses for a loss, pile into stocks, and then see mediocre performance while real estate heads back higher again.I see this, and similar actions, play out over and over.Personally, I'd stick with the real estate rather than selling it.
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26 November 2024 | 4 replies
Uses the syndication depreciation losses to help offset active incomeI did read your post mentioned above @Michael Plaks which is very informative.