22 February 2019 | 55 replies
Look for properties that look distressed.
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3 March 2019 | 10 replies
@Noah Levenson I’m considering running ads to Sellers of distressed properties in my area on social media’s platform.
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13 March 2019 | 22 replies
Here you go.....Consumer Advisory: Long-term Home Ownership Concerns(Wholesaling/Assigning Transactions and Distressed Rescue Transactions).
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24 January 2022 | 14 replies
Here is a PSA put out by the State of CO RE Board:Consumer Advisory: Long-term Home Ownership Concerns (Wholesaling/Assigning Transactions and Distressed Rescue Transactions).Colorado Department of Regulatory Agencies sent this bulletin at 12/19/2018 02:04 PM MST Having trouble viewing this email?
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19 February 2019 | 5 replies
For ARV of a property: once again your Realtor can help greatly with this - but you can get a good idea yourself by:Go recently sold on Realtor.comSold within 3-6 monthsPut in Sq ft parameters(+- around 300 sq ft from subject property)Filter by similiar bed/bathFilter by acreage if necessary Start by going out .25 mile radius, increase as necessary up to 1 mile unless you are in very rural areaCheck the pictures of recently sold to compare conditions of properties (distressed vs rehabbed/updated)Try to find at least 3 good comparables and take a good average of them accordingly.
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20 February 2019 | 11 replies
As best I can tell, it's about 65% rentals on the street and there is some pride of ownership in the owner occupied homes, but there are a couple of badly distressed properties as well.
20 February 2019 | 8 replies
He then follows up with the 5.73% cap rate assuming you do not gain occupancy and probably don't increase rents. 5.73% sounds like a high cap rate for a property that must be so distressed that it can receive a yield of 17.5% upon completion of a reposition.
22 February 2019 | 11 replies
Awesome area for occupancy, hard area for finding a distressed property.
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28 January 2020 | 45 replies
Unless it is a heavy value-add deal, distressed deal, or new development, you likely won't receive 100% of your capital back at a year 2 refinance.
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20 February 2019 | 6 replies
For example you may choose to invest in a distressed C class property where you can rehab and close within 60 days where inventory is low versus investing in a B class property that may sit for 90, 120 days where inventory is high or vice versa..