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8 July 2013 | 18 replies
Alternatively, you could arrange an earn-out whereby you retain 80% - 90% of his portion of the the cash-flow-before-taxes (CFBT) until he has earned out your half of the property {this could be done even if there is an existing mortgage in-place}.Be warned that if you have a mortgage and your names are both on it, the lender (especially a bank) may force the remaining partner to refinance (rather than simply issue a "release" of the other partner from the mortgage).There are others here like Jon Holdman, and @Bill Gulley, who have deep experience and better know the financing options available to you in the U.S.A.Whatever you do going forward, spend a little time with a real estate / partnership attorney and get things in writing.
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8 July 2013 | 5 replies
My long term goal is to spend years learning the real estate business to eventually buy and flip houses for my retirement.
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9 July 2013 | 8 replies
If the agent spends their time with a buyer looking for a $120,000 home then they will possibly make twice the money.
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11 July 2013 | 12 replies
Margins are smaller, properties harder to find and investors choosing other ways to spend extra funds.
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10 July 2013 | 7 replies
You could have turned that $1400.00 into a Billion, like Barbara Corcoran;-)
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23 July 2013 | 8 replies
Curt Smith Indeed life is short. your statement reminds me of the PARETO PRINCIPLE: You want to spend 80% of your time on the 20% of deals that will give you 80% of the profits/cash flow.
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9 November 2013 | 27 replies
At best this property would break-even.San Fransisco has an (overall) average rent-to-value ratio of about 0.4% -- far below what an investor can get in other markets with stronger economics and lower purchase prices.I think eventually you'd find a piece of property with a positive cash-flow, but the length of time you'd have to spend to sift through enough properties to find that "diamond in the rough" would make the effort questionable.Additionally, the very high land cost under those properties carries a high level of exposure and risk for any investor since the first thing to drop when the housing market turns and cycles down are land values.I hope to meet you one of these days Ben. :-)Continued success!
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24 July 2013 | 8 replies
I would plan to spend a morning at the permit office.
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30 July 2013 | 9 replies
Every employer will be spending a lot of money training you when you are first hired.
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27 July 2013 | 2 replies
Clearly, there should be value in adding this feature, and doing so properly and with a permit, so that it's reflected in the title, and i'm trying to gage how much would be acceptable to spend on central air.I've been quoted between $7200 and $16K for a 3Ton complete system, and while i don't always go with the lowest bid, i'm tempted to do so this time since i treat air as a "commodity" and not "finishings" and am at the tail and of a renovation.