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23 July 2015 | 2 replies
Can you lose your ability to rent in the future?
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1 January 2019 | 70 replies
The money has to come from someplace, either the seller is paying (by losing equity) or the buyer is overpaying in a residential deal.
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24 July 2015 | 9 replies
Just don't let it get you down, inhibit you from continuing to invest, or lose too much sleep over it.There may be some lessons here in terms of tenant screening or the types of properties you should invest in.
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26 July 2015 | 9 replies
@Alan CoreyHi Alan.Let's say the property is worth 500 000$ at 95% occupancy based on its NOI and the cap rate.Therefore, the same property with 50% vacancy would cut the NOI by about half since you lose half of its revenus.Using the same cap rate for half of the NOI would lead you to a value of 250 000$.
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27 July 2015 | 12 replies
To your point about agents setting themselves apart for sellers, I've been thinking about shifting the emphasis of my marketing that way.
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27 July 2015 | 12 replies
@Richard D.I agree, judges do tend to side with the tax suit defendant/owner in these cases and Bankruptcy courts are there to protect creditors and losing a major asset over a few thousand dollars in a property tax suit doesn't fit their charge.
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23 July 2015 | 3 replies
I think he getting ready to lose the place.
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20 March 2017 | 21 replies
And brokers that use that old formWhen done correctly, these “deals” are not illegal.I’d say they are more for ‘advanced’ REI and certainly carry some risk when the deal goes bad.From what I see, the problems are investors are not following every requirement in NCGS Ch47G, and/or their contract for leasehold interest is flawed, and/or they lose their buyer.So if you connect with a homeowner that is looking to sell their property and has already contracted with a broker, do you typically stray away from those deals because they might resist these more “creative” approaches?
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23 July 2015 | 8 replies
If you put together a wholesale deal that you can't close - who loses?