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9 October 2024 | 17 replies
Hey @Austin Wolff - You bring up some good points about knowing the house better than anyone when you build new if you are actively involved and onsite regularly, but I'd get behind @Jay Hinrichs, in the sense that the numbers don't always allow you to build new.Here in Chicago, new developments are super pricey, and even the BEST DEVELOPERS HAVE SLIM MARGINS.
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7 October 2024 | 8 replies
Not impossible but chances are slim.
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2 October 2024 | 5 replies
As much as equity sharing is profitable for you, it is also a way to show your clients “Hey I am here for your success as much as you are, and I have a personal investment in you” which is an incredibly inspiring model.I would however say maybe scale your equity based on the current state profit margin of your client, or even work in a sliding scale so it doesn’t turn off potential clients who may be at a slim profit margin as is and are concerned about it getting any slimmer.
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29 September 2024 | 2 replies
Yes, this is as niche as it gets, so odds are slim, but I'm curious to hear if anyone else lives on some acreage while boarding other horses on your property?
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3 October 2024 | 26 replies
Since I am only qualified for 190k the availability for single family homes in that price range is slim.
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30 September 2024 | 5 replies
@Jack Mi: my first impression is anyone that is buying a deal at a 4.5% going-in cap rate with 7% interest rate is anything by conservative.Now, there are so many details missing that it is impossible to give any true thoughts.The things I like:No up front fees, so less motivation to simply transact10% Co-invest is pretty good80/20 (assuming there is no second hurdle) is fairly good.Things that give me pause, based on what is actually presented:Going-in cap rate is very slim.
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27 September 2024 | 7 replies
It sounds like wholesaling could be appealing due to avoiding some of those costs, but the margin is slim between your total investment and the ARV.
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26 September 2024 | 14 replies
So our hopes at reconsideration based on on the historical permit records are slim to none.So it looks like our only move here is to prove that the coach house has been existing as residential for at least 20 years and get an administrative adjustment.
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24 September 2024 | 3 replies
Houston is pretty slim picking these days.
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27 September 2024 | 48 replies
Hello @Daniel Windingstad,Live where you like but invest where you can make money.Out-of-state investing is often your best option if your goal is financial freedom through real estate, because the chances of living in a city that can support this goal are slim.