Roy H.
Is it "wrong" to invest in an STR as your first property?
13 July 2020 | 10 replies
You invest and kind of forget about it, you check on it every now and then, sometimes you make an adjustment to your position, but you don't do a lot with it.
Logan McNay
I could put 80% down, will the bank give me a loan?
14 July 2020 | 12 replies
Usually banks are not willing to make too many adjustments for someone they have not done a deal with in the past.
Leah Richards
New Investor advice in Texas
15 August 2020 | 25 replies
As Paul mentioned, whether you plan to do so actively or passively, investing in multifamily will offer a greater risk-adjusted return and is much more scalable than other strategies.
Kayla Grau
FIRST DEAL. Is it too good to be true?
17 July 2020 | 5 replies
If not, you should adjust them to the sale price because they certainly will adjust once they see the transaction.Is the 2.75% adjustable?
Edgar Fraire
Home Fire Claim - Right to Invoices - Dishonest Contractor
13 July 2020 | 1 reply
I was pressured (by adjuster) to use their "preferred" contractor to do the work.
Carlyle Small
Contesting an appraisal
14 July 2020 | 17 replies
There is usually a 1-page form that you have to complete and then attach details of the comps and/or reasoning why they should adjust their assessment.
Ryan Peep
Why the BRRRR method may get your assets frozen
13 July 2020 | 4 replies
The fourth is your cash reserves that allow you to adjust and weather the unexpected.
Matt Wells
Does anyone have experience with the Indiana 1-2-3 Tax Cap rule?
17 July 2020 | 4 replies
Saying that, it may take 1-2 tax cycles for the county to adjust from the owner occ status to non and a cycle in Indiana is 1 year.
Filippo Baldo
Do 7-10% CAP rates on Loopnet sound too good to be true?
27 July 2020 | 9 replies
Even when they show a T-12 performance, many brokers make "adjustments" for this or that.
Leslie Hsia
Calculating ROI Before Purchase, During Rental, and After Selling
14 July 2020 | 0 replies
My investment objective for rental properties is cash flow (and not so much appreciation).In terms of understanding total annualized ROI for a rental property (assuming I already bought it and have been renting it out for some time), my understanding of Total ROI is the following:Total ROI = (Net Selling Price + Total Cash Flow) / (Total Investment Amount), with Total Investment Amount and Total Cash Flow adjusted for inflation.I would then annualize the Total ROI figure by performing the following: Annualized Total ROI = (1 + Total ROI) ^ (1/(Years Held)) - 1Now, assuming that I'm running numbers PRIOR to purchasing a rental property, I've been reading a lot about IRR.