Christopher Lynch
What Is The Best Way to Start Flipping Houses and Raise Capital?
15 January 2025 | 8 replies
There are a lot of pieces that go into the deals and giving someone a percentage of profit will start to become less of a value than what it was at the beginning.
John McKee
Looking back on 2024
3 January 2025 | 7 replies
But as often happens, a certain percentage of my investments “go off the rails”, in other words don’t proceed as planned.
Elvon Bowman
First time acquisition
13 January 2025 | 11 replies
I’m reaching out to you, the seasoned investors, for guidance as I work toward making my first acquisition.So far, I’ve analyzed over 100 deals to assess their viability and profitability, and I understand the law of percentages in CRE.
Melanie Baldridge
Bonus depreciation ?
16 December 2024 | 0 replies
Bonus depreciation is just a special part of the US tax code.It allows you to take accelerated depreciation on portions of your property depending on when an asset is put into service.At the time of this writing, you can write off a huge portion (60% in 2024) of many qualified components that have a useful lifespan of 15 years or less.That means a certain percentage of things like landscaping, sidewalks, latches, appliances, fences, certain flooring, etc is depreciable in year 1.The bonus depreciation rate percentage changes yearly depending on the administration and the tax code.For years 2015 through 2017 first-year depreciation for all the items on a 15-year schedule or less was set to 50%.It was scheduled to go down to 40% in 2018 and 30% in 2019 and then 0% in 2020.But then Trump got elected, and he enacted the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.That moved the bonus depreciation percentage to 100% from 2017 to 2022.In 2023 it went down to 80% and it’s currently at 60%.Depending on who gets elected again, 100% may be back on the table.Only time will tell.We know that the US government wants to incentivize more development and ownership of RE.They want Americans to continue to build and maintain our physical world.That’s why real estate is one of the most tax-advantaged assets in the US.Depreciation and bonus depreciation for RE are very positive and will likely continue in the years ahead.
Tom Sahar
Joint Venture Model
21 December 2024 | 1 reply
These are really questions for your attorney - the more typical scenario for a jv like this is you have a new LLC where you are the manager of the LLC and the investor also owns a percentage of it.that way you don't have to deal with transferring it etc.
Michael Challenger
First Time Home Flipper Looking to Connect w Lenders
10 January 2025 | 12 replies
Start with a fix and flip loan - this will include a percentage of the purchase price and usually 100% of the rehab.
Craig Sparling
Who's got metrics for me? GRMs, CAPRates, YOY Growth, Median Income vs median rent
23 December 2024 | 5 replies
Little details like that are why I obsess over digging deeper than just the metrics.Metrics I find useful:Expense Ratio: Look at operating expenses as a percentage of gross income.
Otis Clayton
How do closing agents fund private money deals?
15 January 2025 | 15 replies
As a lender the pros are that the funds can grow at a particular percentage that the funds are lent at.
Erin Helle
One month left in 2024 - What are your Goals!
23 December 2024 | 20 replies
I have to decide if im going to use a new injection of capital from the sale of my primary residence to:1) Hold in treasury bills at 4.5 percent until I find another property to purchase2) Pay off one of two existing mortgages, one at 3.75 percent and another at 4.5 percent3) Just find something to buy that beats either of those percentages on paper and be done with it4) Possibly loan out some hard money/broker it to a friend to allocateIts never an easy decision, but its a good problem to have.
Jokari Trueheart
Meeting of the Minds, Lending Strategies Needed
18 December 2024 | 4 replies
Quote from @Jokari Trueheart: HI, almost 11 months ago I purchased 3 duplexes and I borrowed the funds from my personal residence which I took out a equity agreement for the down payment on the investment property, great idea at the time because I have 10 years to pay it off and theres no payment requirement, but , I learned more about the consequence that it takes a large chunk of my equity the longer I take to pay it back, so my goal was to refi cash out the investment property to pay it back but I don't think theres enough equity yet to pull the full $106k needed, I only borrowed $88k but with the equity percentage for one year i'm paying about $18k in equity on top of the amount I borrowed if I pay it off in year one, so I need this paid off ASAP before it increases more.