
5 June 2024 | 1 reply
Taking this 34 Unit building and turning it into 15 market rate apartments with 3 Commercial storefronts.

5 June 2024 | 3 replies
Assume 8% mortgage rate and 30-year term.

5 June 2024 | 4 replies
HML just rebranded to PML to give the borrower the illusion that their rates would be lower or terms easier.folks are always looking for that PML who will lend for far less than market.. and as you mention those would generally be individual lenders.ANY COMPANY PML or HML that advertises and holds them self out as a lender no matter what they call themselves are HML or PML they are one in the same.what your getting at with the larger companies is where they get their money..

6 June 2024 | 16 replies
Their properties run roughly 10-25% Cash on Cash return and 7-11% CAP rate.

5 June 2024 | 4 replies
It takes in account just about everything to give you a livability score.https://www.areavibes.com/Here is my rating & classification for each livability score.80 and above A+78/79 A76/77 A-74/75 B+72/73 B70/71 B-68/69 C+66/67 C64/65 C-60/63 D59 and below F

5 June 2024 | 4 replies
As this is a huge factor in determining the LTC & rate of the project.

5 June 2024 | 9 replies
I know some markets are still very hot but it's definitely cooled down a lot here since rates went up 2 years ago.

5 June 2024 | 7 replies
I think the answer likely falls in this: what does the market call for in that area and type of home, and what are successful PM companies doing to reduce vacancy rates?

5 June 2024 | 0 replies
We had 85%+ occupancy and higher than average nightly rates, and our financials supported our sale price of $417,000 in October of 2023- the highest selling condo in the entire complex.

5 June 2024 | 2 replies
There's < 2 months of seasoning for the purchase, cash into the deal is ~$975k w/o rehab (minimal planned so far - turnkey), purchased the property for 35-40% below assessed value, 825+ FICO, and would optimally like to pull out $975K-$1.15M of equity.Main scenarios we've thought of to accomplish this are: 1) structure sale of property from SMLLC to self and secure 30-year new purchase financing on deal (unsure if legal and tax implications if above initial cost basis)2) delayed financing (LTV restrictions a concern)3) cash out refi (seasoning concerns)4) DSCR (seasoning and rate competitiveness concerns)5) one of the above plus a HELOC, personal loan, etc.?