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6 November 2015 | 22 replies
Certain companies would not be eligible to use the exemption, including:o Non-U.S. companies,o Exchange Act reporting companies,o certain investment companies,o companies that are subject to disqualification under Regulation Crowdfunding,o companies that have failed to comply with the annual reporting requirements under Regulation Crowdfunding during the two years immediately preceding the filing of the offering statement, ando companies that have no specific business plan or have indicated that their business plan is to engage in a merger or acquisition with an unidentified company or companies (no blank check companies).Investor Limitations Individual investors may, over a 12-month period, to invest in the aggregate across all crowdfunding offerings up to:o If either their annual income or net worth is less than $100,000, than the greater of:§ $2,000 or§ 5 percent of the lesser of their annual income or net worth.o If both their annual income and net worth are equal to or more than $100,000, 10 percent of the lesser of their annual income or net worth; Securities purchased in a crowdfunding transaction generally are restricted and may not be resold for one year. o Holders of these securities would not count toward the threshold that requires a company to register its securities under Exchange Act Section 12(g) if the company is current in its annual reporting obligations, retains the services of a registered transfer agent and has less than $25 million in total assets as of the end of its most recently completed fiscal year.
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22 November 2015 | 23 replies
You could count me in as well.
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28 October 2015 | 8 replies
Welcome aboard @Matt Henshaw, impressive on your podcast count, I'm still on like 90 something. :)
30 October 2015 | 2 replies
I'm not trying to be flippant.If the garage space is being used as a bedroom, then it probably wouldn't be profitable to decrease the bedroom count to return it to being a garage.
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1 November 2015 | 3 replies
Most lenders will count a percentage of the income from the property toward your debt to income ratio.
2 November 2015 | 6 replies
As $600 is 1% of 60,000 your rental would fit the bill.My word of caution is to understand that single family homes are really good investments as rentals so long as you don't count on the cash flow (in most cases -- NOT ALL!!)
11 November 2015 | 7 replies
There are plenty of people at retirement age who do not have $500,000 liquid (or illiquid) on their personal balance sheet.But that 28 number has a downside ... you have a long way to go in your life and lots of things can happen in your personal life and in your real estate business that will alter your business and goals.First, to earn $10,000 per month ($120,000 per year) on $500 K is a 24% return ..... possible BUT you probably can't count on that much return EVERY year in any investment (OK ... somebody will dispute that assertion).I suggest that your (soft) goal for the next several years would be to double your capital to $1 million by doing what has worked for you.
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25 May 2017 | 12 replies
Is it the case that MOST mortgage lenders require 2 years landlord experience to count rental income, and only a FEW of us like @Dan P's lender and my firm will do the silly online course and consider the box to be checked?
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5 November 2015 | 4 replies
Keep in mind that the extra debt of the secured loan will be counted against you, when qualifying for the mortgage.
6 November 2015 | 5 replies
Refi usually means that you get a portion or whole of your principal back, so in this example, you may want to count that $85K as return of principal, not ROI.So, your initial position is $100K cash.