
23 August 2012 | 5 replies
Some associations have such a high percentage of non-paying owners that dues are high just to make up the difference.It is like any other purchase.

22 January 2019 | 6 replies
Both lenders can be equally in first position but have a different percentage in the loan.

17 February 2020 | 16 replies
And I'm sure the fear of rejection is greater than the reality, but what percentage would you say are deeply offended or nasty with you?

25 February 2021 | 26 replies
@Zachary Hendricks - each deal has been different: some had a set interest percentage and some had a percentage of the profit.

14 February 2016 | 16 replies
Percentage rate monthly, cash up front to do the loan (in place of points) and the advantage I think would be to pay cash for the property and save quite a bit of closing costs.

31 December 2017 | 14 replies
Your post does not give info about how much percentage high, size of how, how many people live in the house etc., If the tenants are new and their habits may say something as well.

19 April 2016 | 18 replies
Have you considered a creative equity deal or percentage of increased revenue?

7 February 2014 | 4 replies
Make sure you're lawyer looks over all contracts so their mistakes don't transfer to you.If you just want to know more about them I would ask what areas of town they have experience in, how often they wholesale deals, what percentage of discount do they pass on to their buyers, etc.This should give you an idea of how experienced they are.
24 August 2016 | 5 replies
Although receiving a higher return is a very important aspect of Crowdfunding, the potential higher return also increases the risk so investors need to factor that in when contemplating each investment offering.Out of all my investment platforms, I have made the highest percentage returns on Ifunding.

29 January 2014 | 8 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?