Environment & efficiency
July 4, 2012, Chris Johnson in Oregon property tax, Portland Economics, Portland Oregon sustainable real estate, Portland Property Management, Portland Seller Services
Exploit your ideas
July 4, 2012, Chris Johnson in Oregon property tax, Portland Economics, Portland Oregon sustainable real estate, Portland Property Management, Portland Seller Services
IT & e-commerce
July 4, 2012, Chris Johnson in Oregon property tax, Portland Economics, Portland Oregon sustainable real estate, Portland Property Management, Portland Seller Services
Leadership
July 4, 2012, Chris Johnson in Oregon property tax, Portland Economics, Portland Oregon sustainable real estate, Portland Property Management, Portland Seller Services
Experience
July 4, 2012, Chris Johnson in Oregon property tax, Portland Economics, Portland Oregon sustainable real estate, Portland Property Management, Portland Seller Services
Success
March 30, 2012, Chris Johnson in Portland Property Management, Portland real estate buyer's agent, Portland Seller Services
What do you think about us?
March 30, 2012, Chris Johnson in Portland Oregon sustainable real estate, Portland Property Management, Portland real estate buyer's agent, Portland Rental Property, Portland Seller Services
What is a GIM?
July 18, 2011, Chris Johnson in Oregon property tax, Portland Economics, Portland Oregon sustainable real estate, Portland Property Management, Portland Seller Services
GIM stands for Gross Income Multiplier, which is also known as Gross Rent Multiplier (GRM). This is a method used to value plexes/apartments by dividing the price of the property by the current rental income. If the total current rental income is $20,000 and the asking price is $240,000 then the gross income multiplier =12....
What is a CAP rate?
July 18, 2011, Chris Johnson in Oregon property tax, Portland Economics, Portland Oregon sustainable real estate, Portland Property Management, Portland Seller Services
A Capitalization Rate (CAP rate) is the percentage rate of return based on a piece of property’s income. This is the income divided by price. A property that costs $1,000,000 with a net income of $120,000 would have a CAP rate of 8.30 %.
What does LTV stand for?
July 18, 2011, Chris Johnson in Oregon property tax, Portland Economics, Portland Oregon sustainable real estate, Portland Property Management, Portland Seller Services
LTV (loan-to-value) is simply the amount of the loan as a percentage of the total purchase price. A loan of $200,000 for a property worth $400,000 would mean an LTV of 50%.