Lynne MacFarlane
Path of Progress in the Midwest - Your Thoughts?
5 August 2018 | 37 replies
That's horrible.I was amazed how trendy (and relatively expensive) Fountain Square is and established Broad Ripple areas are.
Will Timolien
The Real Estate Education Group ,
14 February 2016 | 5 replies
Any "system" being offered by a group like that is probably of no more use to you than the simple rules of thumb that are helpful in a broad sense but not necessarily true for any individual investment: the 2% rule, the 50% rule, the 70% rule... hmm might be time to come up with more creative names for all these rules.
Scott L.
Use an auction to sell a house we just refurbed?
5 October 2015 | 0 replies
So we're trying to reach as broad an audience as possible... before we hit winter here on the east coast.Any pointers on auctioning a finished home would be *most* welcome.Thank you,Scott
Chirag Shah
Austin Rehab Vendors/Contractors
4 March 2018 | 15 replies
You could get a couple quotes from GCs who can knock out everything for you in one go and compare that to hiring and coordinating the major items directly.There are roughly two broad categories of GCs.
Max Villacreses
Property Manager/ contractor BROAD RIPPLE IN
18 September 2018 | 2 replies
Good evening all,My partner and I are looking into a deal in the Broad Ripple, Indianapolis area and wanted to see if anybody could refer me to a reputable property management company / good contractors in the area.
Sara Mofrad
how to make sense out of buying a rental property in California
29 June 2017 | 7 replies
Search the forums for lots of discussion on the topic.But, to be succinct, imagine buying a $1M fourplex that generates $8500/m in gross income.Now, make a spreadsheet to figure out what each of the following could be:"Cash Flow" - The amount of money left in your bank account at the end of the month (ignoring reserves and non-recurring expenses)Free Cash Flow - The amount of money you can count on at the end of the year (allocating $ for reserves, vacancy, etc)Total Return - The amount that your net worth will increase by holding the investment (includes free cash flow + gains from paying down mortgage principal)Total Projected Return - The amount that your net worth will increase, based on market projections (includes projected gains/losses due to housing market price changes, development/value add for the property, or changes in CAP rate).IRR - Wrap it all up for the expected length of time you'll hold the property to see how it'll perform overall and to compare it to properties in other locales.Now, adjust all those for your personal tax situation to figure out whether it's a good investment for you.For San Diego, you should be able to look at different situations to see why it makes sense for some people to invest there.I haven't yet seen broad agreement on exactly what to call each of those terms *for REI* - there's a difference in terms that real estate finance pros use vs. how us mere mortals speak.
Steve Siran
Vacation Rental Investor
24 December 2016 | 16 replies
But broadly speaking, here are some thoughts:Staging and photographyMaybe the most important step.
Chris Bailey
What are you seeing out there with investment properties?
7 June 2017 | 5 replies
That is a very broad question.
Bob Crane
Article - Housing Starts Drop for Third Straight Month
18 June 2017 | 2 replies
@Bob CraneBloomberg radio talked about this issue recently.Housing starts are lagging the improvement in the rest of the housing market, which is adding to the lack of inventory for buyers.In a very broad sense, many of the workers that were in the industry left after the downturn in 2007-2008.So, there is a huge shortage of workers.
Naeem Boucher
Got the 1st! Working towards 2nd Property.
14 January 2018 | 27 replies
That is such a broad statement, as you can buy whatever you can afford, right?