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24 March 2013 | 13 replies
For example, when do you pay out the profits, are there penalties to the investors if they pull out of the fund before a certain number of years, do they roll over the profits they've made and if so, are there incentives for that other than compounding, are you paying out - or allocating - ALL of the profits to investors or yourself each year (meaning if the fund closed tomorrow would you keep the chunk of money left over after paying out the investor profits and initial investments or would you divide that chunk up between all the investors), are you paying yourself a salary for managing the fund and if so, are you also profit sharing???
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26 January 2018 | 36 replies
By purchasing more than one asset in a pool, the allocation of the purchase price is optioned to the Seller which tends to help get more trades done.
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12 February 2013 | 5 replies
For example, if the assessed value for the subject property in the year you purchased it was $100,000 and the assessment for land was $20,000, or 20%, if you allocated 20% of the purchase price of your real estate purchase to land the IRS would probably accept that as reasonable.
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7 March 2013 | 14 replies
For the most part all miles can be allocated to one or the other.
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11 November 2013 | 42 replies
As I anticipated, no one has actually answered my question, so I thought I would be a bit more specific.From what I can glean, B-Corps were created specifically to provide a vehicle for private foundations to allocate their funds to assets that generated revenue, but whose primary purpose was not profit.
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11 December 2014 | 11 replies
I would suggest breaking down the allocated purchase price for each property in the offer.
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22 February 2013 | 14 replies
If a shareholder has contributed exactly one-third of the company's capital, then exactly one-third of the company's net profit or loss must be allocated to that shareholder.Your idea of contributing the same amount of capital and treat the funds from your "money guy" as a loan is a good one :)
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25 February 2013 | 14 replies
Here is a link where I posted about allocating utilities to tenants without separate meters (not advisable in my state of PA):http://www.biggerpockets.com/forums/52/topics/72185-water-sewer-bill---what-to-do-with-it?
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6 April 2014 | 4 replies
Even allocating 5% to mgt. looks like it's a 1/4M over priced.
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26 January 2014 | 12 replies
The percentage of your capital gain that is allocated to "qualified use" (i.e. primary residence usage) will still be tax free up to the $250,000/$500,000 limit.