
21 July 2022 | 7 replies
You could look them up in the court records or you could get them from a data provider like list source, propstream, batch, etc

3 October 2020 | 14 replies
How recent is your data?

6 January 2019 | 13 replies
The 50% rule simply reflects the data from hundreds of thousands of rentals in the United States that operating expenses (including vacancy expense) run 45% to 50% of the gross rents.

23 January 2014 | 7 replies
I haven't gotten any actual data, but preliminary proforma suggests the property is under priced significantly based on the popular rules of thumb abounding on this forum, and has significant upside potential-nowhere to go but up really.

17 May 2022 | 11 replies
The data they used was awful.

21 January 2024 | 43 replies
But if I am understanding you correctly, if it's shown on line 44a....then that data is then put on line 9 of the Schedule C?

19 June 2014 | 51 replies
I just need access to the data and zillow provides that.

19 November 2019 | 12 replies
@Pedro Amador there are data sources that can provide you with a list of target properties that match your exact criteria.

11 March 2016 | 182 replies
When Genius Failed: The Rise and Fall of Long-Term Capital Management - By Roger LowensteinI think there's a good lesson for all of us in being humble, understanding the limitations of own brilliance and prowess, understanding the limitations of "overly-calculating" prices and risks that all the data and math in the world cannot account for (no offense "big data" folk and economic statisticians)!

5 January 2020 | 24 replies
This was the criteria I used (it's heavily based on the Best Ever Syndication Apartment book written by Joe Fairless):Criteria UnemploymentGet this information from Census.gov under the “Selected Economic Characteristics” data tableCalculate the unemployment change over a five-year period using the unemployment percentage for the city for the last five yearsIdeally, you want one that is decreasingA low, stagnant rate is acceptableA high and/or low increasing rate is unfavorablePopulationBoth the city and MSA population data can be found on Census.gov The city data will be under the “Annual Population Estimates” data tableThe MSA data is located in the “Annual Estimate of the Resident Population” data tableCalculate the population change for both the target market city and the metropolitan statistical area (MSA) using the population data for the last five years for the marketAn increasing population is idealA stagnant or decreasing trend is unfavorable, Especially if apartment supply is on the rise Population AgeFind this data on the Census.gov website under the “Demographic Characteristics” table.