
25 February 2013 | 5 replies
The adjoining business actually has 5 contiguous lots on the next street over. 3 (zoned for business) contain the existing business operations and their parking.

20 January 2014 | 4 replies
Glad you are back at it.If you are taking on an investor/partner, then you want to structure the LLC with the correct operating agreement.

20 January 2014 | 6 replies
I would go the other way....keep it as an operating investment!!!

20 January 2014 | 18 replies
From what I understood, it has something to do with the involvement of the government in the way Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac operate (the Federal Takeover of 2008) As I was explained, the new DTI requirement will apply to private portfolio loans, but not to loans that will be sold to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac (Conventional loans).

24 January 2014 | 18 replies
It's an eBook with a wealth of information on setting up these plans, including many of the rules, pitfalls, legal interpretations, numerous links, as well as a sample LLC operating agreement useful, apparently, in Arkansas.

20 January 2014 | 1 reply
Hi @Josh Little , I own and operate a property management company in the Portland metro area and 2 to 4 unit plexes happen to make up most of our accounts.

23 January 2014 | 5 replies
See http://realdata.com/blog/understanding-net-operating-income-noi/

22 January 2014 | 1 reply
And they claim to "operate in a variety of markets throughout the US".

29 January 2014 | 36 replies
If you are going to move from residential (1-4 units) to larger multifamily buildings you will need to look at things like a business: it's all about the operating margins and cash-flow.

14 March 2014 | 4 replies
Care to share with me which turnkey operator your investor was working with?