
13 June 2022 | 4 replies
Interest rate (what rate can you stomach in 5 years?

11 February 2022 | 1 reply
REA meetings , realtors that sell investment properties and if you can stomach it wholesalers.

15 February 2022 | 4 replies
The MLS is not a ghost town if you can stomach paying over, just make sure it still cash flows with 25% down.

31 October 2022 | 7 replies
Cons: Hard for me to stomach $24k in closing costs....that feels like money thrown away.

10 February 2022 | 15 replies
One of my primary residence's HVAC went out ($7K), and in the same week a rental of mine crapped the bed, so it's likely we have to replace that one as well ($6K), so you gotta be able to plan and stomach the downturns. 1) Go buy your own primary residence, preferrably a 2-4 family if you can-- but if you can't-- do at least a 3bd, 2 bath and rent out the other rooms.
20 February 2022 | 4 replies
if you have the stomach for this stuff you can retain legal counsel and sue the seller for specific performance (literally making them uphold their part of a valid contract).

1 March 2022 | 8 replies
Could you stomach having lost $200k in 2 months and still owing the $200k in fees and taxes on your sale?

6 March 2022 | 1 reply
The money can be good though, if you have the stomach for it.Plus you would most likely end up working for a larger company in order to have some back-up and to get cheaper liability insurance....which means you will only make 60% approx of the inspection fee.....
13 March 2022 | 9 replies
If that means running a debt service loan to 1.00 or whatever you can stomach to obtain the most equity possible that's what I would do.

18 June 2022 | 11 replies
This would be an alternative solution to keeping your property.Unfortunately, Toronto has really strong tenant rights, and trying to increase rents or evicting them will be next to impossible.Negative cash flow is always a tough thing to stomach but in the long-run the appreciation on your property will be well worth it.Cheers,Ben