
4 December 2014 | 10 replies
VALUE = The Analyzed NOI that you want to buy/ the market cap rate derived by SIMILAR ACTUALLY CLOSED SALES.

18 May 2016 | 21 replies
As such, your plan cannot invest in ways that provide a benefit to, such as into a property you will use personally, or into a real estate deal where you derive some profit.

6 September 2015 | 4 replies
@Dan FunkWhen an IRA uses debt financing, the percentage of the income derived from the borrowed money is subject to UDFI (which is a sub-set of UBTI).

21 August 2015 | 3 replies
It depends very much on your situation, employment status, age, goals, etc.Both SDIRA and Solo 401k plans are great tools for taking control of your retirement savings and having the ability to invest in real estate.The 401k has some advantages, but not everyone qualifies for this plan - or if they do today, they may not 3-4 years down the road.The key advantages of the Solo 401k are higher contribution limits and the ability to avoid UDFI taxation on income derived from mortgaged property investments.

3 July 2022 | 23 replies
Bonus depreciation is derived from the portion of the property's value with a shorter useful life than the buildings themselves.

8 June 2023 | 29 replies
The question is will it derive extra revenue from adding it or do you need to do it to maintain revenue to keep up with competitors?

29 January 2016 | 7 replies
Beware of people from other states declaring something in probate to be true or factual.As for getting inheritance lists they usually are expensive to buy because it is derived from inherited houses after probate.

15 May 2023 | 56 replies
This is making it tough for multi families in the KC Metro to have great COC return (Ive been seeing sub 5%)Single families have (within the past 2 months) become incredibly competitive in the 40-300k price range due to low inventory derived from sellers not wanting to sell bc they can't justify trading in their 2.5-4% rates for 6%+ rates.I listed a condo 3 months ago for 140k and no one wanted to touch it.

8 May 2024 | 14 replies
I wouldn't want a tv in my mathroom to distract me from pushing out all those derivatives but to each their own.

20 May 2022 | 130 replies
(Great Recession) is highly unlikely. we dont have high leverage, mislabeled MBS tranches, derivatives of derivatives or derivatives, deregulation, etc. collapse is not the same as a correction or devaluation in home prices.