
30 December 2024 | 819 replies
Because I bought the property all cash, literally had 100% equity in it, and SURPRISINGLY didn't sell for a loss...I got a nice injection of cash back to me.

24 December 2024 | 9 replies
Are there any city or lender required repairs that will require an immediate injection of capital?

23 December 2024 | 20 replies
I have to decide if im going to use a new injection of capital from the sale of my primary residence to:1) Hold in treasury bills at 4.5 percent until I find another property to purchase2) Pay off one of two existing mortgages, one at 3.75 percent and another at 4.5 percent3) Just find something to buy that beats either of those percentages on paper and be done with it4) Possibly loan out some hard money/broker it to a friend to allocateIts never an easy decision, but its a good problem to have.

24 December 2024 | 25 replies
Unsurprisingly our economy is doing much better than theirs currently after that hot money injection.

13 December 2024 | 4 replies
Do you have the Capacity/Ability to close, do you have the Character/Credit to close (including relevant experience), and do you have the liquidity to properly provide enough collateral (are you injecting enough into the deal).

10 December 2024 | 7 replies
Most lenders are going to want to see a few big things from the ownership group. 1) The borrower will be the enitity (LLC, S-Corp, etc) and any owner with usually 20% or more of ownership in the entity will be expected to guaranty the loan, 2) We'll want to see some experience doing similar projects from at least one of the main owners, 3) We'll want to see bank statements showing liquidity enough to cover the intial cash injection (down payment), the closing cost, and some cash in reserve.

9 December 2024 | 15 replies
Some investors rely on the BRRRR method to keep their capital working, but in a high-rate market, a short-term strategy like flipping a property could also provide a quick cash injection to maintain growth.

22 November 2024 | 92 replies
Acquires a new one via capital injection annually, and with the pyramiding, after 20yrs of this will be siting on a nice holdings that is planned to fund kids university tuitions via rents at that time, which around yr17 we will start deploying into assets with more of that cash-flow focus.

15 November 2024 | 17 replies
For clarity, as i understand the concept of reinvesting in the business, each "Bucket" should eventually fund itself without the need for cash injections or contributions.

10 November 2024 | 12 replies
After a transformation, I import information from Stessa (it auto-injects info from banks) into a relational database, run a few queries, and then do a cross-tab query to bring it all together into a report.