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Results (10,000+)
Sib Bahjat Pros/Cons of deeding a property to an LLC
19 February 2016 | 21 replies
In other words, if 3 people are equal partners in an LLC, the lender can use one of those people to determine their risk factor?
Silas Lee new member in NoVA looking to become better investor!
26 February 2016 | 9 replies
Factoring in self maintenance (eating/showering/gym/shower/caring for dog/ect), thats another 3-4 hoursI went to a local REI networking event recently and marketing for properties was talked about.  
Michael Maloney Jr. Getting my own appraisal?
15 February 2016 | 6 replies
When you get a buyer Their bank will require an appraisal and that will be the deciding factor as to price.
Cindy Petersen Looking for Buy and hold investment opportunities in SaltLakeCity
11 July 2016 | 12 replies
Perhaps they are suggesting that deferred maintenance is not always factored in, or something else.  
Lacey S. How to overcome my DTI problem
31 March 2016 | 27 replies
@Sean GrapevineAm I understanding your post correctly when you say that the borrower can use the Fannie Mae 1025 form to factor in potential rental income when calculating the borrower's DTI when applying for a mortgage?
Alexander Santini Seller financed idea, just a hypothetical, figured i would share
16 February 2016 | 0 replies
, but i ran the numbers and after that it didn't look so appealing, and if you were to factor in capital gains and other fun government taxes, well, i don't think it's a good option, and there are for sure better ways to exit.The numbers play out like this (not considering taxes, capital gains, and other factors, i was just trying to play around with the idea and keep it simple for the start):Your NOI: ($119,160 + $30,000)  - $70,000 = $79,160 or $2638.67 per year for 30 years and $219.89 per month for 30 years when you factor in the 30% down into it ($137 per month for 30 years)Cap Rate: 2633/70,000 = 3.76% per year for 30 yearsCash flow: $331 per month for 30 years but only $137 of that would be profitROI: 2.33% without the 30% down factored into it (3.76% with the 30% down factored into the calculation)Total ROI = $79,000/$70,000 = 112.86% over the course of 30 yearsConclusion:Well, from what i see here, the problem is the interest rate used.
John Burtle Is what this bank told me true?
17 February 2016 | 13 replies
Your income will be a factor too.
Skylar Dejesus Intriguing deal? JV Partners?
17 February 2016 | 6 replies
Skylar:I'm not in a position to help you, but did find and error in your math and your thinking.First, if the monthly rent is $6,900 and the vacancy rate is 8%, then the monthly vacancy cost is $552, not $75.Second, you need to factor in a fee for a property manager - even if you are managing the property yourself.  
Chase London 4k-10k Homes. Go or No Go?!
24 February 2016 | 36 replies
The pivotal factor for our team is rehab costs.
Darryl Blalock Looking at a Quad in Georgia
29 February 2016 | 4 replies
My numbers did factor in 10% property mgt.