
14 May 2012 | 3 replies
The listing agent at one of the homes I found by myself and intend to buy is offering me 1% cash back from his total 6% commission, if I do a dual with him.

24 May 2015 | 33 replies
Unfortunately, this route does not make the total amount of my IRA available to me for my purposes, but I think the tradeoff is woth it.

26 May 2012 | 10 replies
Right now I am offering a monthly payment for return, focusing totally on cashflow.The question has come up about what happens when the investor has had a 100% return and also the exit strategy.I am wanting to make sure I am not giving away the farm on negotiations.

31 May 2013 | 63 replies
Joe, are you saying that if the loss is total than they would cssh me out and keep the property?

23 May 2012 | 17 replies
Still, at the end of the day, if your money is gone you have nothing.I can show you my total annual return of 20% for 20 years in Portland RE.

20 May 2012 | 9 replies
That total DTI ratio can go to about 40%, maybe 45% with stellar credit or other mitigating factors.This deal looks fair at best.

21 May 2012 | 15 replies
I don’t know if the supply of these has increased or decreased due to bank manipulation, but I do know that the number or rehabbers (wannabe’s and experienced) has skyrocketed.Every local REI club I attend is packed with those either looking for deals or selling questionable properties at inflated values.

25 May 2012 | 17 replies
Statistics show that tenants use up to 40% more water when they do not pay for it.Your options are usually to:1.Have the total rent include water,sewer,and trash.2.Sub meter out the units from the water company if they allow it3.Prorate the amount of water usage for the building an bill each tenant.4.Have a company bill them instead of you.5.Have a private company install meters which is cheaper and they bill the tenant for what they use.This avenue you are still responsible to pay the water to the city/county even if you bill the tenant and they do not pay.On lower income housing I see about 60 to 65% pay their water you bill them for every month and the rest you have to chase for the money.You have to pay the water company regardless.The other factor is tenants will let friends was cars with the outside spigot,take showers,do their laundry,etc. and the tenants will also usually not report leaks or drippy faucets as they do not pay for the water.Another thing to look out for is what does the city/county charge for water and sewer rates.If you research a county you might find they have upped the water rates by 50% in the last 6 years.So one county using 1,000 gallons costs you 100 and in another county it costs you 56.You have to really look at how old the water and sewer system is for the city/county etc. and look at all the costs.I can tell you water is the talk of the town with buyers of multifamily.It can just crush your bottom line.
20 May 2012 | 6 replies
The cash you've put into your "investment" very likely totals over the $325 its worth.