
17 January 2016 | 7 replies
Follow your heart, try to un-weight financial considerations from the decision.

16 January 2008 | 10 replies
Good business relationships are worth their weight in Gold!
23 February 2016 | 23 replies
Are you weighting any comps based on sold date or anything?

24 September 2019 | 29 replies
It sure takes a huge weight off me.Evolve lists my home with all the popular vacation rental websites.

17 December 2011 | 15 replies
A good tenant that pays on time every month, doesn't trash the property, and settles down for a while, is worth their weight in gold.Shop around when looking for insurance and such.
12 May 2014 | 21 replies
Yup you'd really have to study your comparables and know the formula from which the appraiser will use to determine value there are three methods:- Comparable sales approach (residential sales , 1-4 unit income properties)- income approach - 5+ units/comm/indus/office- cost approach - unit/special use properties (chruches, very old, etc)Using comparable sales approach which will be given the most 'weight,' with residential 1-4 unit properties and know the most recent sold properties, the differences, the elevation, the location (back corner, T street, culdesac, etc), upgrades, floor plan, sqft, school district, amenties, how recent the sale was, and how much a reasonable buyer in the market has paid for these variables will determine the value of your home to an appraiser.Ultimately if the home will not appraise we will not lend above and the buyer will need to bring in cash to set the new ceiling on comparable sold properties if they are that bold to do so.

27 May 2014 | 12 replies
Then there is the rest of the sea with floating trash that is dead weight that will take you to the bottom.

10 January 2014 | 6 replies
When I say in the process, I mean we have secured lending, have evaluated and attempted purchase of 1 candidate (couldn't close the deal) and are now moving on to another candidate that we like.I've been reading around the forums about some of the financial evaluations and am working to understand why Net Present Value of free cash flows is not being used more in the evaluation of a property.It is interesting to understand the CoC as an income statement percentage and it is certainly interesting to do some quick calculations with perhaps the 50% rule.But until you take a series of cash flows, discount them by a Weighted Average Cost of capital, and determine if you can clear your next best alternative (stock market, paying down debt), how do you know if you really have a something that will make you money?

14 September 2010 | 10 replies
In a town of 900 with a branch bank location, what is the market for the one and only Pizza Pen? I