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17 December 2009 | 14 replies
We have seen a change in the market here and are adjusting our business accordingly.
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11 March 2010 | 46 replies
Problem is I'm way too motivated still so I'm going to get into more insurance adjusting, buy a couple online businesses and probably flip some properties.
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8 July 2011 | 7 replies
Monthly mortgage payments of roughly 2,000 would be made to the servicing company and would include payment for the adjusted taxes and the required property insurance.
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22 July 2011 | 7 replies
Peter, In most cases, the costs incurred to acquire property are adjustments to basis and not deductions.
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15 January 2015 | 14 replies
Instead, it is an adjustment to cost basis and recovered through depreciation only after the property is put in service as a rental.The IRS goes a step further and tells us that repairs needed to make the property ready to rent are also adjustments to basis and not expenses.
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17 August 2011 | 9 replies
Matt when I get comps that are a little bit different I use a trick I learned about a month ago which is adjusting on the difference in sq ft and/or number of b/b, lot size, year built, and also you have to take into account what type of terms were on those comps when they sold.
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19 August 2011 | 6 replies
., at that point I can re-evaluate the value of the property and adjust it with the new tenant.I was running the numbers on the next property I want to purchase, and using a similar scenario as this one, (assuming I purchase the property for 5% below appraised value) with 20% down, on a 24-month contract I'd still make about 70% return WITHOUT the 2% increase (closer to 100% with it).
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28 August 2011 | 2 replies
(It is not a repossession if the buyer puts the property up for sale and you repurchase it.)You will keep essentially the same adjusted basis in the repossessed property you had before the sale.
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29 August 2011 | 1 reply
Above $177k - No Go.They go by adjusted gross income (AGI) I believe - Don't believe it matters where the income comes from.I'm not a CPA, so take what I say with a grain of salt.
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19 January 2013 | 10 replies
Do they start another 180 day Extended period at the same list price or do they adjust the list price?