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9 May 2024 | 4 replies
Forced Apperception (BRRRR or buying at a discount) allows me to build in equity from the beginning of the investment in case I need to fire sale the property for an unforeseeable reason.Debt-Paydown and Tax-Benefits are just a result of owning real estate and can be more-or-less predicted over a time period.
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9 May 2024 | 6 replies
Pros:- Everything is all in one place- Easier to manage, less hassle (likely)- More predictable - Easier paperwork Cons: - Less liquid (have to sell all or none) - All eggs in one basket Just off the cuff, those are my initial thoughts.
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10 May 2024 | 21 replies
Thanks Stuart.I don't think a "thesis" is necessary for real estate investing.Your mixing "thesis" with speculation and prediction IMO$1m in cash is retirement for someone that knows what they are doing in "low barrier" markets like you mention.Same can't be said for higher entry markets.Those that don't know real estate will loose no matter where or how they invest.Personally, I don't care about appreciation as I don't get out of bed unless I can net cashflow 20% net on a deal.For example, just bought a 6 unit in a B class area for $160,000.Currently occupied and renting for $3,000pm.Once minor rehab of $50,000 is completed, rents will be $4,500.I have an offer to sell as is for $250,000.ARV is $350,000.When interest rates go down, value will increase even further due to commercial lending being easier.No need for appreciation on such deals.I'll take them all day long over any appreciation potential.Again, just my opinion and each to their own.
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9 May 2024 | 6 replies
I want to purchase properties all over the U.S. in specific areas that my wife and I calculate and predict high returns on with multi family units, apartments, duplexes, etc.
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8 May 2024 | 0 replies
They play a vital role in the decision-making process and have been instrumental to anyone's success as a real estate investor.
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14 May 2024 | 201 replies
I bought the land for $180 per 1 lot (4 adjacent lots, making one big rectangle)I don’t think anyone is quibbling with your comps or predicted sale price.
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9 May 2024 | 12 replies
You can't predict what the HOA fee will be next year, assessments and changes in rules.
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14 May 2024 | 125 replies
You need to be making predictions on a property by property basis of both cash flow and IRR.
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8 May 2024 | 4 replies
I'm planning to have ROI, rents, cashflow, expenses, debt service, repairs/maintenance, return on equity, appreciation (I think this works over the long-term, kind of hard to predict in the short term especially with what we've seen in the last few years, but I usually conservatively estimate this anyway at 2%) and return on equity.
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8 May 2024 | 50 replies
And to date, not 1 of the naysayers and doompreachers has come onto BP to recant there "certainty" predictions that were SOOooo wrong.