
12 September 2024 | 32 replies
You may find a partner who is more willing to put in a larger capital injection if they get a better CoC return or equity stake.

3 September 2024 | 2 replies
Will you be required to inject capital if they need it to repair roofs / foundations / plumbing / etc.

2 September 2024 | 8 replies
I will be injecting new funds every year.Full Control: I enjoy analyzing deals and prefer to have full control over my investments, so syndication is not an option.Given that I'm a complete newbie in real estate, I would greatly appreciate your advice on the following:Selection Criteria: What factors should I prioritize when choosing properties?

24 August 2024 | 11 replies
It took a lot of Botox injections first.]If you’d like something to worry about for your circumstances - because all you have provided to us is: “The tenant broke the lease and moved out…” - consider this AZ law: https://www.azleg.gov/ars/33/01370.htmAn advice that probably does not need to be stated here, but still: Depending on the facts of your circumstances, I wouldn’t comment on whether you complied with this law, which I also assume is currently in force - this is a public forum, and you shouldn’t volunteer potentially-damaging information to the other side.And, again: None of the above is legal advice, as I am not a lawyer.

21 August 2024 | 1 reply
Typically, creative financing is geared toward lowering the capital injection needed to acquire the property which comes at higher risk to the lending entity (thus higher cost) of rate.
21 August 2024 | 182 replies
With all due respect, you can't ignore politics in real estate when politics injects itself into real estate.

18 August 2024 | 14 replies
Inject the colored water into the system c.

20 August 2024 | 452 replies
For the lender, it is tax as interest by normal methods.If you deposit any personal funds into your business it's treated just like any normal "cash injection" that you provide.

13 August 2024 | 24 replies
Hence they already tell to reduce the rate possibly in September.In all fairness to the unpredictability argument, the Fed had data showing massive spikes of inflation in 2021 while also knowing that the US government had injected trillions of dollars of stimulus into the economy during the pandemic but decided to pass it off as "transitory" due to "supply chain shocks" (not wrong, but wildly overblown).

9 August 2024 | 13 replies
Sharma,Just a few things on the surface the deal looks great in terms of gained equity for the price plus injected costs to renovate/repair.