
4 November 2008 | 22 replies
Fertilegal,There are many financial and mortgage calculators available Free on the net, including on my website.You can also calculate interest only payments (principle in first few years is very small anyway) by doing the following:Loan amount (Say $50,000 for example)Multiply by interest rate (say 7%)Equals annual interest, then divide by 12Looks like this:50,000 X .07 = $3,500 / 12 = $291.67 monthly payment.As far as an ARM vs. fixed rate, depends on your exit strategy as you pointed out, but it also depends on the current and potential future market conditions (lending).

28 December 2008 | 18 replies
Typically we bill the tenants for the cost of the service multiplied by a Mark Up.

8 January 2009 | 4 replies
that any consistent payment to the same IC and they can be viewed as an employee.

31 March 2012 | 44 replies
It is much more stable and consistant than the stock market.Also, IMO, the only way to make true money in today's stock market is to find a stock of a small company who has huge growth potential and buy when they are at their 52 week low or close to all time lows.

10 June 2009 | 19 replies
It will take the percentage in B38 and multiply it by your gross income to calculate a "bulk expense amount" based on your expense ratio.

18 November 2009 | 11 replies
This 5 feet of space is consistently mud, and it gets so wet that in the winter (rainy season) water runs through my garage quite severely (there is a constant stream through it).I know very little about drainage.

25 October 2012 | 1 reply
It's a historical building (which means 1/2 off my taxes) with four well-maintained units that have been consistently occupied and I'm cash positive each month (about $900 before taxes etc).

20 December 2012 | 8 replies
There is no consistency in which direction the cylinders are mounted in the lock.

24 October 2018 | 18 replies
Also more expensive.Your mistakes in a larger building are going to be multiplied also.

24 February 2013 | 6 replies
I'm always willing to pay less than it may be worth, and sell for more than it's worth.Assessed Value: (the following is an educated guess) someone's, in government, best guess at value at some point in time, sometimes arms length, sometimes according to a formula, sometimes actually close to the real value, which is usually multiplied by a tax ratio that will allow the municipality to pay their expenses, pensions and equipment.....please note that both assessed value and tax rate can be changed regularly to effect the desired monies to pay for such expenses.