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30 April 2019 | 1 reply
So the down payment would essentially just be 40% in total.1) Would the bank allow me to request a 60% LTV mortgage or anything lower than 60%?
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11 May 2019 | 8 replies
I would essentially be purchasing 17 vacant flips for a really cheap price.
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5 May 2019 | 10 replies
Essentially that would put you in the exact same position as selling the property except you’ll be able to collect continued cash flow there after the three years.Then you do the math and realize that The deal I offered you is a 26% three year loan.Hold it.
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3 May 2019 | 2 replies
In my head this makes sense as whoever rents the place would essentially be paying it off and we could definitely afford to put 20% down.
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1 May 2019 | 6 replies
@Matthew Choi Absolutely It does help, so with the construction loan that I would essentially paying for 2 loans , the mortgage and the construction loan
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11 May 2019 | 15 replies
@Scott Krone - Hi Scott, so if my husband and I are buying a property in an OZ for $625,000, that is already 100% occupied by renters and essentially does not need any work done to it, are you saying we need to put $312,500 into it for the IRS qualification???
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28 May 2019 | 10 replies
Also, in the beginning it's essentially the same as ROI and therefore conflated.
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5 May 2019 | 2 replies
HiI am having a hard time understanding how one should pay himself within a family partnership (LLLP).i have limited understanding in taxation*My accountant advised we have a salary paid by the entity, essentially making us employees.i read that there are some caveats to that, is there an alternative/conventional way to set-up recurring compensation?
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1 May 2019 | 2 replies
I am having a hard time understanding how one should pay himself within a family partnership (LLLP).i have limited understanding in taxation*My accountant advised we have a salary paid by the entity, essentially making us employees.i read that there are some caveats to that, is there an alternative/conventional way to set-up recurring compensation?
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6 May 2019 | 16 replies
The commercial LOC is essentially borrowing cash at a certain interest rate.