24 October 2015 | 2 replies
High income individual with no time or desire to spend time on rental properties.
26 October 2015 | 3 replies
Max offer = Desired Total Profit + Rehab + Buy/Sell Costs + Hold Costswhere desired total profit considers any wholesale profit and rehabber's profit AND risk (time, rehab, location, etc.)2.
28 October 2015 | 9 replies
It just allows either partner to give reasonable notice they desire to leave the partnership then the assets can be divided or sold, liabilities paid/divided.
26 October 2015 | 18 replies
What I saw were properties that I had described earlier: multiplexes (4 or lower) in less than desirable neighborhoods or 40+ unit apartment complexes that I'll never afford.
23 October 2015 | 2 replies
By that, I mean folks that probably buy empty lots in good areas and build houses for sale or those that buy older houses in desirable neighborhoods-- tear the them and build new houses for sale.
24 October 2015 | 5 replies
If the land is back in the woods or off the beaten path some where other types of development would not find it as desirable then the cell tower might be the answer.If you have a great piece of land in high demand then pushing the tower off to the back on a corner with a small access road might let you keep your other land to extract value out of.Would really have to know the address, how large the land is, topography of your land, etc.
23 October 2015 | 3 replies
Formerly a contractor, this real estate investor desired to enter the “flipping” space and had identified a great candidate for his first “flip.”
23 October 2015 | 21 replies
If the property is in a high desire area, maybe the seller can sell the mouse house.
23 October 2015 | 1 reply
So we saw this unbelievable price for a quadruplex in a desirable neighborhood.The only problem is you can hear all the cars speeding by on the highway some 500ft away...
25 October 2015 | 12 replies
In regards to the rental analysis, here are my numbers:Purchase Price - $140,00020% Down - $28,000Rehab Costs - $10,000 (very prelim/rough)Loan amount - $112,000Rental income ~$1500Principal & Int - $568 (4.5% 30yr fixed)Taxes - $210Insurance - $100Management - $100 (bro-in law short-term)Maint/Capex - $200Cash Flow - $322Cash on cash return - 10.2% (16% without accruals)My desire would then be to re-fi as soon as I can to somewhere close to a 75% LTV of the $200K ARV.