They feel they have an advantage
over other investors because they know the ins and outs of the company and have a better overall picture of the company's wellbeing.
Not exact matches
Because financing for primary homes is cheaper, living in one unit gives you an advantage
over other investors.
Because of the behavior of
investors, and increasing interconnectedness between markets, the degree that risky assets diversify each
other has been decreasing
over time.
Because Conservative
investors are still «investing,» they should have a higher return
over most rolling three - year periods than investing 100 % in money market funds, fixed annuities, CDs, and
other bank instruments.
Investors have favored CMBS offered by commercial banks
over other issuers
because they believe banks such as Chase are more committed to the market and have stronger underwriting standards than their Wall Street competitors.
Because financing for primary homes is cheaper, living in one unit gives you an advantage
over other investors.
NOTE: Cash
investors get preference
over other financing methods
because they're able to close more quickly.
For example, when do you pay out the profits, are there penalties to the
investors if they pull out of the fund before a certain number of years, do they roll
over the profits they've made and if so, are there incentives for that
other than compounding, are you paying out - or allocating - ALL of the profits to
investors or yourself each year (meaning if the fund closed tomorrow would you keep the chunk of money left
over after paying out the
investor profits and initial investments or would you divide that chunk up between all the
investors), are you paying yourself a salary for managing the fund and if so, are you also profit sharing??? I ask that last one
because once I switch
over to a fund like this, the money I am currently pulling out of each deal to live on, would need to stay in the fund and I'm left with no income until the end of the year if that's when the fund distributes profits.
«For
over $ 5 million,» he added, «
investors love retail condos
because the appreciation in value beats out any
other assets.»