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2 October 2008 | 2 replies
I'm interested in purchasing a multi-family, $2M, > 80 doors, cap rate 10%.
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12 September 2008 | 37 replies
That's why cap rate is so commonly used for commercial real estate.
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13 February 2009 | 32 replies
Wasting beer is a sin... but so is gettin' a cap busted in your a$$.
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11 December 2014 | 6 replies
First: I'm not a lawyer or accountant, so don't rely on this advice.That said: you're within the cap gains allowance for primary residence.
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23 December 2014 | 41 replies
And even now they have a cap on what they'll pay for mold remediation.
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11 January 2016 | 16 replies
While I realize each geographic market is vastly different in terms of acceptable cash on cash returns, I'm curious for what benchmarks or rules you have set for your business to ensure long term financial success.For example, I evaluating a property right now with 11.86% Cash on Cash and that includes 10% vacancy, 12% PM, 5% Cap Ex and 10% Repairs.
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2 January 2015 | 1 reply
Determine what cap rate you'd like.One way to do this is to say:Selling Price = NOI/CapRate.These are just some preliminary methods that could help you get a ballpark.
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23 January 2015 | 9 replies
It sounds like a great deal, and you can't argue with a 16% CAP rate.In fact, I would say you are doing it exactly right.
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29 June 2017 | 11 replies
I know that NOI/Cap rate= property price, but I don't know what cap rate to use.
29 August 2017 | 9 replies
I've been trying to refinance this property for a few months and am having a very difficult time finding a lender that seems to fit the model of what I'm trying to do here.I'm trying to refi for around 70-75% of he ARV which is just over 300k.The rent roll is $3350 a month and after reserves for taxes, insurance, etc. it should cap out at around 10%.I'm trying to keep the title in the business name.