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18 March 2018 | 42 replies
Owner financing to others and Pray is a good thought as some have suggested.. you know there are thousands on BP that are dying to get into the landlord business maybe you can find one that has limited cash but will take these on just for the privilege of getting started.
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9 May 2018 | 8 replies
This illustrates the power of compounding.It is compounding like this that I didn't see him touch on in his real estate investment deal analysis.
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15 November 2016 | 12 replies
If you refinance the property and get all of your initial purchase plus renovation costs (possibly more) and are still making money, that money is pure profit and you can do it again but possibly better.As you compound that monthly cash flow, it decreases the costs of materials and labor for the next BRRR/Build/Flip and you're making even more money on the refi/sale.The idea is to expand your money supply through other people's ability to pay rent and pay for the financing.
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27 December 2019 | 27 replies
compound interest".
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16 October 2006 | 4 replies
Do you put them ( or a portion of them ) in a compounding interest account ?
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18 July 2014 | 10 replies
By the time they do show up, you have made the same mistake a bunch of times in the interim, compounding the problem.
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22 April 2016 | 4 replies
While not a lender myself, nor an attorney, I can say that many of my former CRE industrial clients have bought buildings that they originally occupied 51% or more and then either bought another larger building to accommodate growth or reduced in size or went out of business and leased the entire building(s) out to tenants.I think the occupancy rule is in place to discourage investors from accessing SBA loans for the simple privilege of using these funds for speculative real estate investment.
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29 July 2018 | 13 replies
ONLY negative these days about Napa and north bay is traffic other than that one of the best places in the world that I have ever been to or had the privilege to live.. my 10 years at Silverado was off the charts wonderful.
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26 September 2010 | 11 replies
The investors in the fund are currently yielding 12% annually, if compounded, or the investors can choose to be paid out quarterly.
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5 August 2020 | 12 replies
It's also worth noting that IRR is NOT equal to a Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR).