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29 August 2020 | 3 replies
Luckily all of my rentals experienced minimal damage compared to so much destruction I've seen all around them.
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30 August 2020 | 8 replies
The franchisees have little to no net worth to speak of and minimal liquidity on average.
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28 August 2020 | 1 reply
I dont have all the facts, but I would lean towards a HELOC because there may still be some 75-80% LTV options out there and the closing costs are minimal.
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25 January 2021 | 24 replies
No maintenance hardly at all, no grass, modern irrigation systems, minimal required landscaping.
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31 August 2020 | 11 replies
Reserves are minimal.
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30 August 2020 | 4 replies
However, that would minimize liquidity were there to be an emergency where that cash was needed in a more immediate sense.
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6 June 2021 | 38 replies
One thought on the remodels if you could get one unit vacant, remodel that one, and then move an existing tenant over to the remodeled unit, repeat the process until you are done.I have done that before and it's worked out well for everyone, the tenant gets a fresh place to live and the disruption is minimal.
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8 September 2020 | 3 replies
Also, are there any creative ideas around how to minimize risk and/or generate some negotiating leverage here?
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9 September 2020 | 10 replies
While this may lead to a lower rent and higher near term it will minimize your losses near term.Additionally, if you do have to rent for a lower rate than you are expecting you could always do a shorter term lease agreement.Best of luck,John
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4 September 2020 | 9 replies
I would go with a hard money loan if the conventional path is: i) not fast enough to fund; ii) you're tapped out on a global LTV basis; iii) you need up to 100% of rehab costs to be covered, which I know isn't your case; and/or iv) you want a loan to be underwritten with the asset in mind and minimal emphasis placed on borrower FICO.