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18 February 2015 | 16 replies
wow, I think like u, but never had to explain to seller.I think its irrelevant.
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20 November 2014 | 16 replies
Hello,My name is Ben, I'm a U of Minnesota Alumni and am working full time as a project manager in the printing industry.
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3 February 2014 | 4 replies
thanks again j scott. u rock!
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8 February 2016 | 3 replies
cool i'm in a similar boat albeit here on the west coast. hopefully its not under ur own roof u come home to as thats when its at its worsts - 24/7 and obviously not worth it once they default AND/OR breach. tenants too often dont seem to realize not paying and/or not keeping any unlawful (ie, prohibited) activity at bay IS as serious as if the landlord were to suddenly, permanently shut off the water/electric/gas etc or lift the ceiling off their rental.
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26 January 2016 | 23 replies
It's worse when u have tenants in the unit and are coordinating showings out of state.
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19 February 2016 | 103 replies
if u neglect just 1 lender, eventually you'll be forced to give something up.
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7 February 2016 | 1 reply
the rule of thumb is - until u find one that fits your criteria.
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21 January 2015 | 35 replies
If he is blowing you off because your a smaller client then get rid of him as well as he will not treat u better moving forward and might look at a smaller acct with lack of attention.
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29 July 2015 | 16 replies
http://eyeonhousing.org/2012/01/31/an-aging-housing-stock/http://www.constructiondive.com/news/builders-put-positive-spin-on-negative-number-for-housing-starts/218564/ http://www.demandinstitute.org/sites/default/files/blog-uploads/tdihousingdemand.pdfhttp://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-12-24/sales-of-new-homes-in-u-s-exceeded-forecasts-in-november.html
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12 August 2013 | 7 replies
@Ceasar Blackman I wanted to get opinions on what u and I were talking about from BP, So......I wonder if the $725 rent is a realistic number for pine hills...if so...If someone got into this property for 25k, put 10k in it....now your ARV is 35k.The total yearly income for the rent is $8700 based on that rental rate of $725.Now figure a 25% vacancy rate to be safe and you're at $6,525 a year.Minus $1,000 (insurance and tax estimate) ur at $5,525.Now calculate the ROI by taking the yearly income from the investment $5,525, divide by total cost of house $35,000 you get 0.1578571428571429 - move that decimal over 2 spots to convert to % and ur looking at 15.7% ROI.That's a pretty good return, I was told average is 8-10 %.