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6 November 2020 | 34 replies
Hard money lenders will typically reduce the down payment percentage for more experienced flippers as well.
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18 September 2019 | 20 replies
@Angela MIller My first thought is doing a Partnership agreement upon an LLC structure, and you guys can state who owns what percentage in your partnership agreement.
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22 September 2019 | 6 replies
I though that because the property is only 783 sf area it was enough percentages for capex.
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24 September 2019 | 20 replies
@Jason Padgett As @Greg Dickerson said there are several ways that syndicators will structure the operating agreement, and that will dictate how much if any of the depreciation is passed through to the investors.The most common scenario I've seen, is where the investors receive an equity stake in the property, as an LP, according to the percentage of their investment in the deal.
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21 September 2019 | 2 replies
But depending on your answer, if you have debt on the sfr, do you only own a percentage of that?
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22 September 2019 | 4 replies
You need to find out if the condo is financable with fha or conventional....fha has requirements and conventional has requirements....mostly with the percentage of owner occupants verses owner’s, percent of units deiquent on hoa dues, etc.
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22 September 2019 | 6 replies
In addition, your vacancy [3%] and repair [3%] percentages are relatively low to what things would actually cost because of the low purchase prices and low monthly rent income.
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22 September 2019 | 7 replies
These are standard for every company, but may vary in percentage or amount a bit depending on who you use.
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24 September 2019 | 4 replies
(This is completely my personal opinion)Find what percentage works best for you & your business model, but in order to grow your business, remember that you need to invest- and continue reinvesting, in it.For instance, if you make a wholesale profit of $10,000, I would suggest splitting it at least $5,000 to reinvest & $5,000 for personal.
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28 June 2020 | 7 replies
Who owned what percentage of the asset is all they can factually verify, and they can verify if that equity sold at close enough to Fair Market Value to be considered an "arm's length" transaction or was the equity gifted?