
16 January 2013 | 21 replies
Thus, if it’s not going to be earned income, than it had to be passive income of some sort.

31 March 2014 | 21 replies
Then, each of the next five or six years (five years of time is usually spread across six tax years) you take a portion of the costs for depreciation and reduce your basis by that same amount.Now, under some circumstances, fair market value does come into play.

17 January 2013 | 12 replies
You then transfer balance from one to other to reduce the usage to under 30% of both credit cards.

7 February 2014 | 9 replies
You can click on the "vote" button if you like someone's post or is helpful, and there are "awards" to earn on your profile.

8 September 2015 | 25 replies
Vacancies rise and rents are reduced as a result.

16 January 2013 | 3 replies
The key is getting a big enough down stroke when they move in to reduce the risk of them trashing the place.

3 February 2013 | 3 replies
The tax code practically forces you to convert your earned income from dental practice, which will be highly taxed, to passive income from property, much less taxed for many reasons.

4 February 2013 | 10 replies
Likewise on the amortization schedule that the two loans don't ever cross as to outstanding balances.If there is no pre-payment penalty on the underlying loan I'd take the $20,000 DP and start doubling up on mortgage payments, etc. and reduce the principal on the loan quickly.

6 February 2013 | 35 replies
Because of the current liquidity cost, I have to reduce my trading considerably.In the old days, a statistical arbitrageur can make three digits annual return with very small drawdown, not anymore.

1 July 2013 | 36 replies
So, the real question is what's the fastest way to earn a few million that you can invest?