14 January 2023 | 2904 replies
Those assets running well in excess are most susceptible to step downs, those in parity will have most pricing endurance or upward pressure.
12 September 2018 | 202 replies
(So in future- if leaks at copper to PVC joint, at least it's in dirt and not under concrete.)A reason the 'good idea' might not work at our location: We don't know where the old PVC line is- suspect it might be a direct run from the meter to the house (which is diagonal).
30 April 2018 | 92 replies
I have a ramp for moving my snowblower or bigass generator. 10 foot pipes or moldings can fit diagonally, and I have a roof rack for larger loads, or my kayaks and canoe.It's a 2001 I bought in 2004 with 60k for $7700.
30 March 2021 | 98 replies
There data is rather well established, it is going to take years, many years, to catch up on the housing shortage and ramp up construction to parity (where pace of building meets demand at a net 0 factor).
31 October 2020 | 392 replies
Do an ounce of leg-work, look up what fed is doing, look up NAHB economist data for housing supply numbers and parity.
30 July 2018 | 11 replies
It can work that way, but you have to put diagonal shelves or a diagonal cupboard back in there.
21 June 2023 | 66 replies
Point #1 - Absolutely wrong....there are many reasons that a Tile Contractor will (and should) charge more - diagonal placement instead of straight, curved tiles, art/picture tile, really expensive tile that makes you go slower (like $100-200 SF), hard-to-cut tile, fragile tile, and many others....Point # 2 - I'm guessing that your 'helper' was not a legal employee, with all the labor burden, plus Workers Comp and all those niceties?
22 October 2017 | 110 replies
A 30 year fixed Rate Mortgage paid by the Tenants disappears in 30 years.Let's say you started a Company that's traded on the Stock Market and that Company bought 1 Property for $1.2 Million, took out a 30 year fixed rate $1 Million Mortgage on the property, broke even on the Cash flow.The Company issued 200k Shares.To Calculate the Current Share price it should be trading at parity, you take the Shareholder's Equity and divide it by the outstanding shares.The Shareholder's Equity is $1.2 Million minus the debt of $1 Million = $200k.
27 November 2020 | 119 replies
Always good to see an Aussie kicking ***.I have always been interested in investing in the US market, especilly Detriot as far back as when the dollar was at parity, however being an undergrad student and tied up to a mortgage at the time meant I didn't have the spare cash at the time.
16 April 2020 | 16 replies
We own the 4-unit diagonally to the rear of your Nov 2019 purchase.