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26 September 2006 | 5 replies
When we get our next tenants and raise rent, we will have positive cash flow.Although we knew a little, we didn't know a lot, going in, but i think we will do okay.
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11 June 2018 | 9 replies
In the meantime, a quit claim deed, even from a distant relative, gives you a more defensible position -if another heir makes a claim, or if anyone accuses you of trespass.
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29 September 2006 | 6 replies
There was a girl who puchased a house in NC for $30K, and appraised at $70K , and Rent is $800 , positive cash flow.
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16 March 2017 | 13 replies
Then he discovered his friend's only reason for wanting the position: To tell the ho's to paint their houses and keep their yards fresh and spotless and fine them when they weren't up to HIS standard.
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6 October 2006 | 7 replies
But, I jump ahead of myself.We are well-positioned financially.
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30 April 2010 | 10 replies
Number wise everything works out, the property should produce a small positive cash flow but what I'd be banking on is the appreciation of the land being in close proximity to Biloxi.
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15 October 2006 | 1 reply
i was depending on this money from pinnacles when i lost my job. i invested $85K and never took out my returns. my total investment was $177k. my one acct was closed in 10/10, the other two accts in 11/13/06. i believe i would have gotten my money and i would not been placed on this position if it was not for government regulatories. if they still have a caring heart hope they speed up the process and pay us back on time. because we got use to get paid on time so we can pay our bills and not losing our homes that we worked hard for.
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26 November 2006 | 23 replies
A lot of people use them interchangeably.I typically think of "rehabbing" as longer term more substantial improvements whereas "flipping" would be more cosmetic and focused on a quicker turn around.But that's more for positioning in my own mind.
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19 December 2006 | 1 reply
-has a positive cash flow-is rented at below market rent -has a cap rate greater than 10%-relatively good shape -Occupancy is above 90%-Price/unit is below $30,000...would you buy it if you had the funds/financing to do so?
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28 December 2006 | 3 replies
I have several investors who have been in this position and they have focused on buying a rehab and when all of the rehab is completed, they have it appraised and refinanced to help them pull out some more cash towards their next purchase.