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15 November 2007 | 12 replies
You have training costs, licensing costs and costs associated with operating under a broker when you get your license.2.
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3 November 2007 | 13 replies
What most new landlords don't understand is that operating costs run 45% to 50% of the gross rents.
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5 November 2007 | 4 replies
Throughout the United States operating expenses run 45% - 50% of gross rents.
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5 November 2018 | 25 replies
This will be a go to programming when the seller wants to remember your telephone number.Side note, call the television operator and introduce yourself.
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23 December 2007 | 6 replies
I’m a former Deloitte Touche CPA (Los Angeles office), spent three years as the GM of a property management company that owned and operated two mobile home parks and a good-size office building.
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24 December 2007 | 4 replies
What types of services that a virtual assistant could provide would benefit real estate investors?
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20 December 2007 | 3 replies
If he is not on the title, then he does not receive any tax benefits with the losses generated by the rental real estate operation.
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14 January 2008 | 15 replies
If you're talking about rentals, then you subtract the operating expenses and the mortgage payment from the gross rents to get cash flow.
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1 June 2009 | 8 replies
The only problem is that you omitted nearly ALL of the operating expenses.
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4 January 2008 | 12 replies
All things are relative with regards to any lease that is the so called "net" format vs those that are "gross" or "modified gross".The term net lease has been chopped up over the years to include "net - N", "double net - NN", or "triple net - NNN".N - generally refers to the actual property operational maintenance costs.NN - generally refers to the property maintenance and limited other costs, i.e. adding in insurance or RE taxes or some other limited set of items.NNN - generally refers to all associated property operational costs.For clarification a "net lease" means that the tenant is fully responsible for some or all of the property's operational items; On the other end of the spectrum is the "gross lease" which means that the owner is fully responsible for the operational items; "a modified gross lease" is a combination of the two and usually includes an expense stop for the tenant.Expense stop means the owner is responsible for all costs up to that point, i.e $3.75 per sf per year, and the tenant is responsible for the pro rata difference over that amount.