
30 July 2011 | 7 replies
You could double hedge with entirely leveraged RE for the possible runaway inflation and have equal cash for runaway deflation.A company that has equal cash to debt is thought to be pretty healthy.

17 August 2011 | 3 replies
Leslie, Short answer (from the perspective of a Colorado Realtor/Investor) is: Case #1: The Plaintiff now has a lien equal to the deficiency balance of $85,453 + the $2,500 bid price against the defaulting borrower.

21 August 2011 | 14 replies
In California, a "professional" tenant can make life a living hell for a landlord unless they have somebody equally experienced to combat them.Never bring a knife to a gun fight.

9 October 2017 | 40 replies
So just imagine the property when it was first completed, that should be your guideline to rehabbing) minus PURCHASE COSTS (home warranty, fire insurance, title and escrow) minus OPERATING COSTS (months vacant either sold or leased, yard maintenance, utilities, garbage, water) minus MONEY COSTS (traditional bank loan, lines of credit, private money, hard money, interest only, points at close on escrow) minus SALES COSTS (Brokerage fees, Property Taxes, Title, Escrow, Buyers Concessions) equals YOUR BUY PRICE.

20 August 2011 | 15 replies
I would hazard the belief that any intelligent life in the universe, or even within our own galaxy, is extremely distant from our planet, too far away to be any threat.This "study" simply sounds like more left-wing environmental propaganda pushing its agenda rather than true science.

25 August 2011 | 25 replies
Option 1: 5 rental properties paid in full every year with rents equaling in gross $1200/mo each.Option 2: Rehabbing 12 properties every year with a net profit of $25k each property.Option 3: Wholesaling 48 properties a year with a $5k profit on each property.And you can repeat the process over and over for however long you wanted.

24 August 2011 | 6 replies
Now the agent, he would not be getting his commission from selling the house and then his profit split but we would include the amount in the profits so we equally get our %of profit.

25 August 2011 | 1 reply
All other things being equal, I would suggest presenting/listing your product (flip property) at the beginning of the highest sales season.

21 September 2011 | 4 replies
Wait that long and the house won't appraise which equals tenant/buyer doesn't get mortgage which equals seller has to lower their price or move on to a new tenant and a whole new contract.

10 September 2011 | 3 replies
Currently one package unit handles both apartments, a throwback to when it was one apartment before I split the bottom into two equal sized units.Corporate tenants expect good things, so I have to give them separate control, which either means adding another package unit and splitting the old rusting ductwork, or putting in a mini split system, which I figure will be more efficient I guess my question is, in a house with not much insulation, would a mini split more efficient than a package unit for a person like me who is paying all the bills?