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10 February 2015 | 2 replies
Good personal reasons Tim, all RE is local, the niche aspect I so true.In any economic transaction, higher profits go with higher perceived risks, it's also going to be limited as to entry in higher profit alternatives, when higher profit potential is there, so will be the barrier to entry, knowledge, expertise and legal aspects.Do I buy a $120, 000 home and rent it out with a return, say of 14% on my money or do I go with a $1,200,000 office warehouse with a 10% return?
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10 February 2015 | 2 replies
Rents will stay steady or increase as long as there is demand - the whole economics thing :)
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2 January 2016 | 48 replies
California has many different economic bases in various regions.
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13 February 2015 | 6 replies
So for me, it's not just the numbers that make a deal, it also takes vision to look at a property and see how to create an economically viable end product that will generate a decent profit at the end of the day.
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22 February 2015 | 61 replies
Would it be the same for the percentages of returned calls from a yellow letter campaign or any other arbitrary number or formula or calculation depending on market conditions, moon phase, economic conditions, fracking in the northeast, or snow amount in Boston.
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15 February 2015 | 10 replies
There is no way in hell that you would find that here in Dallas unless it had been in a fire lol.Is this just too good to be true and I am missing out on the simple economics of a downturn market there or is this real?
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15 February 2017 | 18 replies
Assumption deals are usually offered because the seller has yield maintenance and can't pay off the loan and it's too early to economically defease.
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15 February 2015 | 6 replies
Commercial deals don't tend to be as short lived as many of the residential deals people invest in, thus you are at more risk for vacancies or economic downturn.
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16 February 2015 | 2 replies
That is to keep sweat equity from effecting the equity shown, that is an entrepreneurial economic aspect, an intrinsic value.
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18 February 2015 | 9 replies
And I am more comfortable relying on Ball State as an economic anchor than I am relying on Chrysler as an economic anchor, going forward.