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23 June 2016 | 5 replies
@James Harris 100% financing is not uncommon, but to answer your question point blank, yes most lenders will have a minimum loan amount and most lenders will require a higher percentage down on smaller loans.
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16 April 2016 | 7 replies
Playing the percentages/estimates likely works out well once you've got some momentum and have some cash flow, but getting off the ground is a different beast.
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23 April 2016 | 17 replies
Looking at the following townhouse in South Jersey as a potential buy and hold investment:Purchase Price: $115,000Rehab: $12,000ARV: $150,000Rent: $1,550/mo.Insurance: $50/mo.Taxes: $325/mo.HOA: $70/mo.Net Operating Income: $1,105/mo.Financing: $92,000 (or 80% of purchase price at 4.5% over 30 years) = $466/mo.For the down payment + rehab, I have a HELOC that could fund it. 3.99% variable rate, 15 year amortization.
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30 April 2016 | 4 replies
Ideally it would show interest percentage and principal percentage to the exact dollar amount of every month and/or year.
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22 May 2016 | 3 replies
So he doesn't need all the money right away, but I'm not sure there is much of a tax advantage to getting all the money now as oppressed to a small percentage now and then the remaining balance in no later than 6 months.
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1 June 2016 | 6 replies
But if there are factors I am not sure about I will take a look at the AVM onhttp://express.realquest.com/propertyvalue.aspx search property values, put in the address and it will give you a value the value it provides is the Medium value it provides a number under it which is the percentage the property can be valued above or below that medium price.exampleon the top left hand corner of the results page you will see Estimated Value: $100,000Forecast STD Deviation: 10 The 10 = 10%your range would look as follows after you do the math Low= $90,000Medium= $100,000High= $110,000
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30 December 2016 | 16 replies
I can see how this would be really difficult where you are, just because of rental levels and housing as a percentage of income.
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31 May 2016 | 4 replies
Item 1st Mail Percentage 2nd Email Percentage Total Sent 235 Good Responses 4 1.70% 5 2.36% Bad Responses 1 0.43% 1 0.47% Bounced 36 15.32% 12 5.66% Total Responses 5 2.13% 6 2.83%
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4 September 2016 | 17 replies
However, what a lot of banks won't tell you is that they have a 30 - 40% rule, where they will deduct that percentage from your gross rents, then they will use the remainder to calculate your debt service ratio.
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11 May 2016 | 3 replies
Hello,I am using listsource for direct marketing and wondering what percentage of equity is best to choose.