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10 September 2018 | 4 replies
I had to edit the report 6 or 7 times; playing around with the numbers and learning how properly enter all the data.A realtor that I met on BP (don't know if I should name drop here) advised me that the ARV would be about 130K and that it would rent for about $1,100. 70% of 130,000 is 91,000.
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3 September 2018 | 4 replies
Consequently, a lot of borrowers hearing about this going on accessed their lines of credit to get their “Cash/ Equity” out before it was frozen and simply moved it to a bank or other account just in case.The note won’t be called due necessarily, unless you were in breach like not paying, but would still have the same terms in place.
30 August 2018 | 4 replies
Otherwise, simply compare rates, points, term, etc, and make a decision.
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31 August 2018 | 3 replies
And then, since I'm the contractor, bookkeeper, tax lady, and homeschool mom, I'm thinking it sounds simpler and worth the extra costs to simply let the guy stay there as a buddy, and pay him through an employee leasing service, do no rental income (or bookkeeping, or Schedule C), and just run it as a regular flip.
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10 November 2018 | 28 replies
There is a big caveat to that though, which is that (1) I haven't entered into any LPs myself, and (2) the clients I work with are large real estate investors not using conventional bank financing.However, I did make loans to LPs as a bank officer prior to practicing law.
16 September 2018 | 8 replies
I'm guessing the main point is how the landlord calculates your utility bill -- does the lease specify a formula for this or simply "utilities"?
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5 September 2018 | 12 replies
Also what worked better for you, a set fixed price for utilities every month, or simply splitting the bill (ex: half and half) when it came?
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30 August 2018 | 3 replies
Then Cash-out refi as much as possible of what you put into the property, and roll that over into something else, or payback where ever you got the money.That is simply one idea, and it can be done in a number of ways.
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30 August 2018 | 4 replies
And any amount you purchase over the amount of your sale adds depreciable basis to your property and does create more depreciation allowance.Your situation isn't hopeless but it's probably going to have to be multi faceted and one where you have to compromise a little.Unless you simply do a cash out refinance and let the property support the new debt.
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30 August 2018 | 2 replies
And you do have 45 days after the sale to simply identify your potential replacement properties.