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Results (10,000+)
Richard Warren Than Merrill of Flip This House
13 May 2016 | 67 replies
Here the club would receive 30% of the amount he collected. 8)
Lakisha W. New to the forum and have a couple questions...........
23 June 2008 | 7 replies
You now have about $12K invested in the property, if you include closing costs on the loan.You rent the place for $1050/month, and assuming an 8.5% vacancy rate (a month a year) and expenses of 40% of net income (a little low, but okay since you just rehabbed), you should see the following returns:- $40,000 in total equity created from the property ($120K valuation minus $80K loan)- Year 1 Cash flow: $862- Year 1 Equity Accrual from Payments: $894- Cash-on-Cash Return: 7.43% (not including equity generated by rehab)- Total Return: 15.14% (not incl. rehab equity or tax benefits, which are investor dependent)- Total Return Including Equity Generated by Rehab: 347%If you choose to keep the property for longer than a year, your total return will obviously drop, but you're still receiving nearly $1000 a year in cash flow, $1000 a year in equity, and still have $40K in equity generated by the rehab.Rinse and repeat...
Nathan Cao Bank of America Requires 20% Down
11 July 2008 | 91 replies
I just received a call from my banker telling me that this policy would be effective on June 29 2008.
Loc Nguyen Advice for the youngster ?
9 July 2008 | 23 replies
The reality is that most mortgage companies do not care as long as they are receiving their monthly payment on time every month.
Dave Kennedy Buyer's Agent....confusion
2 July 2008 | 43 replies
But what about if you structure the deal like this:* conventional mortgage of 80% - vendor only has a mortgage of, say, 50% of purchase price, so the 30% cash they receive at closing covers realtor's commission etc* vendor carryback of 20% - vendor gets paid the remaining 20% as a balloon payment in 2 years, plus interest of 10% (or whatever is agreed)Why would a realtor be opposed to this kind of deal?
Jason Schmidt can someone please explain this 50% rule to me?
9 July 2008 | 163 replies
Divided by 27.5 years amounts to an annual deduction of only $872.
Josh Carpenter Advice Please
29 June 2008 | 15 replies
Others would rather work hard (for example, undertaking a difficult apartment building "value play") and shoot for a 40% annual return (which wouldn't be unreasonable).
Matt DuSold Just a couple newbie questions.
5 July 2008 | 17 replies
So what we did is negotiated the 35K assignment fee as the wholesalers (received a 35k check from the end buyer) then as the owner of the property sold it for a slightly higher price of 49k profit in which we receive the 49k from escrow at the successful close of the property.
Stephen Sluder michael kimble
13 April 2010 | 8 replies
I just started receiving Michael Kimble's emails too- they are tempting, but I agree with Mr_Investor's remarks.Any updates on whether his Customer Support is any more accessible and responsive now?...
Andrew Raymer Demand for payment- HOA "Arrears" - any advice fo
9 July 2008 | 5 replies
, she signed some papers to receive a 1/4 acre lot of land as part of her parents divorce settlement - the land was in - a new planned community in Navasota, Texas.She forgot about the place, until about 5 years ago when we were asked to pay back taxes - We complied, paying probably 400% of the value of the property itself in taxes (We were not aware of any alternatives) - since then we have been paying taxes on time.We once went to view the land (there is no house) - safe to say the community never "took off" - there are a few houses enclosed in woodland, with the occasional manhole cover in the middle of the woods.