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16 April 2011 | 9 replies
Will either of these properties produce additional income other than rent?
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17 April 2011 | 12 replies
Could be a long period of stagflation and low economic growth as rising tax rates kill innovation, and we try to inflate our way to prosperity.
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26 April 2011 | 11 replies
Having dealt with a lot of KW agents/brokers, they seem to attract/produce the higher quality professionals.
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23 November 2018 | 9 replies
The intent is to separate it from the payment (assume the lender will go along with it; i've talked to them, and they will), and put "rental" income on paper, so that it could be used by the LLC satisfy debt/income ratios to secure financing on another income producing property.Can anybody cite code sections prohibiting this if so, or any relavant federal or Georgia statutes?
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29 April 2011 | 15 replies
All of this new money would be put to use in productive projects, produce income, and raise "revenue" at the individual level for the gov-mint to tax.
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28 April 2011 | 18 replies
Agents that can and will produce but also require support as needed, not treated as a lowlife # within their organization.
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28 April 2011 | 2 replies
If you can produce records that show you are engaged in the business, any busines, for say 25+ hours, then you have a business.
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5 August 2011 | 13 replies
Just wondering if anyone here has any experience with a real estate mentoring program from 'innovative investors' ?
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18 May 2011 | 9 replies
If your end buyer needs financing (assuming a loan of that size is available) it will be easier for them to buy when the property is producing income.
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4 June 2011 | 3 replies
Assuming you're talking about NYC, the cost of property is likely such that positive cash flow is very difficult, as rents aren't going to be high enough (relative to purchase price) to cover both expenses and debt service.For example (just a made up example), if a $400K property will rent for $3000/month, that $3000/month will barely cover debt service, taxes and insurance...it won't cover maintenance, vacancy, capital costs, etc, let alone produce any monthly profit.Do some research on the 50% Rule and you'll start to get an idea of the costs associated with holding rentals.