
18 April 2011 | 3 replies
Sounds like a bank is not an option and in my experience private money wants out at some point (3-5 years max), so that leaves you with the seller.Do they need all their equity in cash to move on or could they get by with just some portion?

26 May 2011 | 6 replies
If you're converting a multi-unit and have at least a 30% equity position, Fannie guidelines potentially allow for using a portion of the new rental income.

22 April 2011 | 5 replies
., they get the house before anyone else who might have lent money).10-12% is likely the interest rate they are paying to borrow the money.Points is a percentage of the amount borrowed paid up front by the borrower.Possible equity share means that the lender may get a portion of the profits, in addition to the interest on the loan and the points paid upfront.So, basically what this is saying (assuming the person speaking is the borrower) is:"We borrowed money at a 10-12% interest rate and the lender is first in line to get the house if we default.

26 April 2011 | 10 replies
The bad news is that a significant portion of that passive loss comes from depreciation.

9 May 2011 | 21 replies
You are still going deep in debt and the rest of us (taxpayers) give you a kickback on a portion of the interest you paid on your mortgage.

11 March 2012 | 31 replies
It the dollar amount high enough to fund a large portion of a rehab or new build?

28 April 2011 | 18 replies
If the seller had already paid the $1,654.35, then on Aug 12th, the buyer must paid for the portion of taxes that apply after Aug. 12th.1,654.35/12 months = $137.8625/mo.137.8625/30 days= $4.59542/dayAug.(19), Sep.(30), Oct.(31), Nov.(30), Dec.(31) = 141 days141 days = 4.59542 x 141 = $647.95422SELLER : Credit $647.95BUYER : Debit $647.95 2: Property taxes are $1654.35.

31 May 2011 | 10 replies
If I'm understanding right, tax-free dividends could be a big portion of those funds.

5 September 2017 | 20 replies
If your revenue is high, and you operate efficiently, your employee costs could be a small portion of gross revenue.