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27 August 2018 | 18 replies
Incorporating a management company will be a must, but i don't know of anyone who just loves their property manager.
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29 August 2018 | 51 replies
(Contractor) hereby warrants that the construction work performed at {address here} is free from defects and incorporated into this Limited Warranty for a period of 1 year from the date of substantial completion, date of commencement of use, or date of notice of completion, whichever occurs first.
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27 August 2018 | 4 replies
Oh well, I told her to start reading Rich Dad, Poor Dad and maybe we can incorporate her into our conversations!
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31 October 2018 | 13 replies
My family is moving to the Denver area in December and we'll be in corporate housing for a couple of months, but I'm hoping I can find a house hack in a short time frame.
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28 August 2018 | 5 replies
There are some pros and cons, but as long as you incorporate all of your planned expenditures into the front end of the deal, you'll be fine.
30 August 2018 | 18 replies
The best way to research if a company is incorporated in the state, is to google “secretary of state division of corporations, Georgia”.
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30 August 2018 | 9 replies
Research the requirements of incorporating your LLC in a different state than the one you are doing business in.
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1 May 2019 | 5 replies
We use Nick Alaniz with Alanco Incorporated for everything we do.
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17 April 2019 | 1 reply
I filed articles of incorporation and just hold/sell property using my entity.
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22 April 2019 | 9 replies
@Sonny Sach IRR is equivalent to an annualized return, except it takes into account Net Present Value (NPV) of money; or that a dollar today is worth more than a dollar tomorrow.High level, if you gave someone a 15% annualized return in cash flow every month for 3 years and no back end sale proceeds, your IRR and annualized return would be 15%, because it was 15% always.If you did have of that in cash flow (7.5%) and made up the difference on the back end sale at the end of year 3 (22.5%), you would still have an annualized return of 15%, but you're IRR would be LESS because it took 3 years to get the extra money instead of throughout the entire period.I haven't done the math to be honest, so in the first example they may not be exactly the same, but they will be almost the same where as the 2nd example there could be a couple percentage points difference between the Annualized Return and the IRR.It's because it takes into NPV that IRR is generally regarded as one of the more important metrics when comparing different investments because in incorporates the length of hold to achieve the desired return.