4 December 2017 | 1 reply
Claire Shores, MI is listed as both R-1 and medical office.)
20 March 2018 | 15 replies
If the calculation is equal to 1 then you are not making money, 1 represents that you have enough cash flow to cover your dept. less than one means you were not making money and greater than one means you have a cushion and making money. banks look for above 1 because they want to make sure you will be making enough money to pay them back and that you will have the money should costs rise and change your NOI, I know my bank looks for 1.25 DSCR . usually they just do not look at the properties, they will look at your personal situation ( credit card dept, alimony payments, medical payments) especially if they want you to personally back up the loan. there are a lot of explanations and probably better than i explained, all you have to do is look up DSCR, hope that helps.
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19 March 2018 | 25 replies
Right now I’m basically working in the medical field just not in my specific field of interest.
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15 March 2018 | 3 replies
And through crowdfunding/syndications, you can access and diversify into other real estate asset types like debt, or commercial real estate (apartments, self storage, medical facilities, retail, etc.).
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18 March 2018 | 1 reply
Hello BP community, I was initially getting my degree in the medical field but I hit a bump in the road and decided to switch lanes and invest all of my time into real estate.
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27 March 2018 | 7 replies
They told me nothing but the guy was a youngish doctor and he was having trouble getting a practice established but had been offered a teaching position at a medical school back east.
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27 March 2018 | 2 replies
I am looking for a SFH or Multifamily in the Houston downtown/medical center areas.
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12 May 2018 | 78 replies
For example, someone could have a bankruptcy that's a couple years old or medical bills (very common) or high student loans.
4 October 2020 | 6 replies
I myself am a Medical Device rep who has recently relocated to the area.
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7 January 2019 | 10 replies
Hello,I have a house that was flooded in Harvey (Aug. 2017) for the first time (to my knowledge as I bought it from a wholesaler with no disclosure) .The house is one story with three bedrooms (one of them is a master suite) with a very reasonable living space and backyard.I rehabbed the house and it looks great now, ....nobody would buy it :0(The house is near the medical center in Houston (in a subdivision called parkwest near Westbury) If I rent it it will create a -ve cash flow of about $300I'm thinking to turn it into Senior independent living but it seems to be very complicated strategy with the best yield.Any experience in doing this in Houston would e appreciated?