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17 August 2013 | 6 replies
Then there are other buyers who will take say an 8 cap fully performing property for the decent cash flow and tax write down in a good area.They are concerned less with that extra 3 to 4% annual yield for the headache as they make very high incomes and value their time immensely.I can go on and on but I hope you see why your question is too vague to get to specific.
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31 May 2017 | 13 replies
And if you are trying to rent them for a while, but ultimately flip them for cap gains then this is a good proposition.
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22 April 2014 | 28 replies
The East side of KC can get pretty bad quickly. ..but it also offers high cap rates over 20%.
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10 March 2014 | 24 replies
Crowdfunding caps an amount an issuer can raise to $1 million in any 12-month period.Yes, but often I hear BP podcasts and read BP posts where investors are doing deals well under $100K.
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31 March 2017 | 129 replies
I am getting 12% cap on this house in Kansas City that my partners totally rehabbed, great guys!
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17 November 2013 | 54 replies
So I get the yield and cap gain distinction, and speaking only about the example at hand and not anything else, if the gain of $4k is realized within 30 days ($25k UPB and $21k discounted note purchase), plus the small one month of interest gain, the total return would be significant on that investment, and well worth spending the time to do it while also taking into consideration the efforts to reposition all the funds, both initial investment and total gain, correct?
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12 November 2013 | 1 reply
Usually there are caps put in place for yearly increases to owner occupied houses, but not for investments.
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17 November 2013 | 24 replies
Looking for 4-plex properties in the18-36% cap rate range.
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10 December 2013 | 5 replies
Divide the net operating income by the average cap rate in the area to get your Max Purchase Price.
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24 February 2014 | 58 replies
@Adam Gerig 7.5-8% CAP These are Brand New Houses or 5-8 years old.