Whitney Hill
Owner wants to sell 9 mos from now...best way to tie up property?
29 September 2017 | 17 replies
You could tie it up with a standard contract amended to include "outs" for you on interest rate changes and property appraising at a certain level and changes in your personal financial situation.
Steve K.
Operating Agreement to share?
16 September 2017 | 6 replies
Work it into the budget like you would insurance, etc.
Gary Dezoysa
Stocks/Bonds vs Remote REI?
16 September 2017 | 5 replies
Of course there is also insurance and taxes and maintenance (still well lower than the $1500 for stocks) but it is an asset that will appreciate (specifically where I buy) and if there is a crash I still get the rent.I do also invest in stocks using a method called Iron Condor on the S&P500 Index.
David Barnett
D you have any thoughts on this idea
15 September 2017 | 2 replies
It is basically an insurance against unpaid rents.
Allan Rosenberg
Patch of land rate of defaults and return of overdue funds
20 May 2021 | 63 replies
Worth noting is that one loan that defaulted has an issue with the title: PoL says that the escrow company recorded the mortgage "later than expected" resulting in 2 senior liens, which they expect title insurance to cover.Compare that with RealtyShares, where I also made 14 investments (a mix of debt and equity).
Jackie F.
1031 Exchange Disrupted by Hurricane
18 September 2017 | 6 replies
As morbid as this sounds, this exclusion would theoretically extend to employees, family members, etc.As the result of the Presidentially declared disaster, a document used in your 1031 exchange is damaged, lost, or destroyed.As the result of the Presidentially declared disaster, a bank or lending institution temporarily delays, or decides to not move forward with a mortgage.As the result of the Presidentially declared disaster, a transaction is delayed because of the inability to obtain flood, casualty, or title insurance that is required to complete the transactionDon’t assume that you’re automatically granted an extension simply because the above conditions are met.
Roman McIntosh
Does this deal make sense?
11 November 2017 | 15 replies
I will reanalyze it when I have more informationRent $1,300 Vacancy $65.00 (5%)Repairs $130.00 (10%)CapEx $130.00 (10%)Insurance $100.00 (8%)Management $26.00 (2%)P&I $504.61 (39%)Property Taxes $208.33 (16%)Total $1,163.95 (90%)
Lisa Bradshaw
xome.com auction - is this a scam??
15 September 2017 | 4 replies
You will pay for your own title insurance this way, but the other fees make it lmost a way, but more impoertantly you will get a more thorough tile search, and less exceptions ((things not covered) in the B Section under Exceptions in your title policy//committment.
Stanley Tan
Calculation when selling a house early
15 September 2017 | 2 replies
Since you are excluding fees (which would leave you with a gross profit), are you counting insurance?
Carlo Michelotti
Need so much help analyzing cash purchase of 2 or more properties
15 September 2017 | 3 replies
One-time Expenses$1000 - Acquisition Costs (minor rehab, legal, & inspection)Annualized Expenses10% Gross Annual Rent - Vacancy Costs (turnover & lost rent)10% Gross Annual Rent - Property Mgmt (standard)$1176 - Repairs & CapEx ($1 per sq foot for tpical property)$1516.46 - Property Taxes (5 year historical average for typical property + 10%)$1000 - Property Insurance (a nice round number: seller reported that he paid $708/mo for one duplex)$27 - Water & Sewer (average across several properties from last month)$0 - Gas, Electric, HOA, Snow Removal (tenant pays or not applicable)$60 - Lawn Care (I made this number up)COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS:This is my analysis of the five properties that are being negotiated right now, listed from best to worst.Property Alpha (two-flat)$1250 - Income, Monthly (actual)$567.37 - Expenses, Monthly (estimated)$42,000 - Price, Signed Contract36% - Cap Rate (Annualized Income / Price)16.6% - ROI, After Tax (annually, assuming 15% income tax)6.0 Yrs - Until this property pays itself offProperty Bravo (two-flat)$1100 - Income, Monthly (actual)$537.37 - Expenses, Monthly (estimated)$42,500 - Price, Signed Contract31% - Cap Rate (Annualized Income / Price)13.1% - ROI, After Tax (annually, assuming 15% income tax)7.6 Yrs - Until this property pays itself offProperty Charlie (duplex)$1075 - Income, Monthly (actual)$532.37 - Expenses, Monthly (estimated)$55,000 - Price, Informal Discussion23% - Cap Rate (Annualized Income / Price)10.7% - ROI, After Tax (annually, assuming 15% income tax)10.3 Yrs - Until this property pays itself offProperty Delta (SFR)$875 - Income, Monthly (actual)$492.37 - Expenses, Monthly (estimated)$48,000 - Price, Informal Discussion22% - Cap Rate (Annualized Income / Price)8.8% - ROI, After Tax (annually, assuming 15% income tax)13.6 Yrs - Until this property pays itself offProperty Echo (SFR)$770 - Income, Monthly (actual)$471.37 - Expenses, Monthly (estimated)$62,500 - Price, Informal Discussion15% - Cap Rate (Annualized Income / Price)4.1% - ROI, After Tax (annually, assuming 15% income tax)24.4 Yrs - Until this property pays itself offNotice how the price keeps going up?