
9 March 2020 | 11 replies
There are certainly other financial institutions that do not require the same documentation and in effect are more flexible.
25 March 2016 | 34 replies
Technically, you pay tax on your net operating income minus any permitted deductions (debt interest, capital cost allowance, etc) - known as Cash-Flow-Before-Taxes (CFBT) and not on the accumulated equity, though I think I understand your perception.Sometimes you can get better returns lending to those folks buying 5 CAP properties.A lot of the money flowing into larger multi-units is either corporate/institutional (ie Brookfield Properties or a REIT) or wealth individuals looking for wealth preservation rather than growth (if I already have 500 million, I am more interested in preserving it than growing it to 800 million).For foreigners there are even scenarios where a small return, say 7% CAP, could be a solid investment.

19 February 2016 | 15 replies
Only about 20% of them (mostly institutional investors) wanted a copy of the business plan to review.

3 April 2017 | 16 replies
If the grant deed shows an escrow transaction and an institutional beneficiary, you're in a very solid situation.2) You just want to be certain that you're buying a first trust deed.

24 November 2016 | 4 replies
I'm trying to identify companies that do property preservation for institutional investors and/or asset managers.

28 February 2019 | 55 replies
To reap the full "benefit" of a college institution you have to either go into a higher (Masters or Doctroal) level program.

20 April 2016 | 7 replies
So at the institutional level that's why you'll see most REITs don't gear the fund past 60%.And you need to start looking at the bigger picture.

13 March 2021 | 19 replies
@JR Paulemon there is a Practitioner Finder (Agent Finder) right on the Nelson Nash Institute website.

17 February 2018 | 17 replies
The letter that goes out to the borrower and is usually kept at the lending institution will tell you why.

10 May 2018 | 15 replies
Typically we buy properties under our own name to take advantage of institutional loans that provide LTV and rate benefits.