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13 March 2018 | 2 replies
There's a lot of discussion around partnerships, private lending, and hard money, but I don't see much discussion on the actual mechanics - what these arrangements look like in practice.My hope is this post can serve as a reference for those starting out, so we may get a better understanding of how these strategies are actually implemented as well as an ability to more accurately predict the profits and returns you and your lenders and partners can expect.If those with more experience would like to revise these numbers and statements, it would be most appreciated.These scenarios assume you, the flipper, are bringing none of your own capital to the deal.Typically, this would mean 1 of 2 scenarios...Private Lending - Someone you know brings 100% of project costs (purchase, rehab, acquisition costs, holding costs) to complete the deal and in return, they get a certain percentage return which comes out of your profit.Hard Money + Partnership - You get a hard money lender to cover 80-90% of purchase+rehab and a partner to cover the remaining 10-20% as well as acquisition costs (including hard money origination and points) and holding costs (including hard money interest payments).An aside about the structuring...Private Lending - A promissory note is created, and your private lender lends to you or your business.
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14 March 2018 | 6 replies
If the buyer's payment is at least enough to cover your payment and taxes and insurance, you are good to go.
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13 March 2018 | 2 replies
This neighborhood had suffered badly in a hailstorm about 18 months earlier which was why a lot of us had replaced our roofs.
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13 March 2018 | 3 replies
Don't forget about utilities (if you plan on covering any.)
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7 April 2018 | 3 replies
I believe Civil Court in Marion county covers all evictions but I will do some research there for sure.
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28 March 2018 | 9 replies
Make sure your insurance will cover you in this aspect, some carriers do not (they'll cover everything else, just not the pool).
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19 March 2018 | 87 replies
Once stocks become popular and liquid enough their correlation with each other really starts to steepen.I keep just enough reserves to cover worst-case scenarios with my RE holdings and they're held through a mixture of diversified assets.
20 March 2018 | 15 replies
If the calculation is equal to 1 then you are not making money, 1 represents that you have enough cash flow to cover your dept. less than one means you were not making money and greater than one means you have a cushion and making money. banks look for above 1 because they want to make sure you will be making enough money to pay them back and that you will have the money should costs rise and change your NOI, I know my bank looks for 1.25 DSCR . usually they just do not look at the properties, they will look at your personal situation ( credit card dept, alimony payments, medical payments) especially if they want you to personally back up the loan. there are a lot of explanations and probably better than i explained, all you have to do is look up DSCR, hope that helps.
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13 March 2018 | 0 replies
The warranty specifically stated that only piers are covered.
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15 March 2018 | 3 replies
So, the COC ROI seems to be about 9.744%Not as good as my stocks, but still not too bad.However, my credit union says they can get creative with my financing and use my equity in my personal residence and/or rental homes to cover my down payment.