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3 November 2021 | 3 replies
The best way to explaining this is for you to download an IRR calculator spreadsheet or build your own simple one and play around with one.For what its worth most deals I deem meeting minimal IRR standards is 13-15% but you have to dig a little deeper to uncover the real placements of cashflows and capitalization events... and then dig even deeper to verify the assumptions such as occupancy, rent increases per year, and what reversion cap rate was used.Again I don't look for IRR cause its manipulated a lot instead I look at total return on a 5 year basis.
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10 November 2021 | 9 replies
@Stephen Chatto if this is in a small town no chance that he is going to play that game well.
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8 December 2021 | 48 replies
I played dumb and asked him where he, his wife and infant son were going to live.
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30 October 2021 | 4 replies
The accountant has to play "catchup bookkeeper" for the entire year --- but (s)he gets paid for it apparently...All that being said, there are other advantages to having an additional checking account.
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1 November 2021 | 4 replies
Something to decide on now is how passive of a roll you want to play in the deals.
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29 October 2021 | 3 replies
So that can not play any part in your decision.
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29 October 2021 | 2 replies
If you care about those landlords at all you need to send them a mass email telling them you know there are literally 1000’s if not 10’ s of thousands of landlords on BP that don’t have any of those problems.
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3 November 2021 | 8 replies
So long term play for appreciation is Dallas, Houston for cash flow.
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2 November 2021 | 4 replies
If they can't/won't accept the increase, they'll move on and you'll find someone else.I don't play around with incremental rent increases stretched out over time.
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4 November 2021 | 3 replies
The common advice is you have to hold on to it for at least a year to to qualify to play it safe though it's not stated in the law.