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5 February 2021 | 99 replies
So many people I see posting about Stash and Robinhood, etc.
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16 May 2023 | 115 replies
Stick it out and hope things get better while stashing more cash away.
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16 August 2017 | 56 replies
Find a place to stash excess cash to diversify risk from equities assets 3.
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8 March 2023 | 70 replies
@Stephanie Windemuth I simply do not agree with you .. this business model is ANYTHING but brilliant.. its been tried over and over and each and every company has a run make a bunch of dough and leave the poor investor holding the bag and many losing almost all their money.just not sustainable for a out of area person... its a joke really
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17 July 2020 | 41 replies
Can you imagine all the jokers and tire-kickers they'd have to deal with if the barrier to entry was only $500 or $1,000...or nothing?
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27 November 2023 | 4 replies
Once you've picked the right one, personalize it to the specifics of your case, serve it up to your tenant the right way (in person, certified mail, or a polite door posting), and don't forget to stash a copy for yourself.
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25 March 2022 | 53 replies
The second is to go "all in" and start building a "stash".
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23 January 2019 | 3 replies
@Jose M. the best strategy depends on your resources and goals.Most of my clients like their jobs and make enough money to stash some in savings or has credit access against the equity in their residence or income of their business.
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31 July 2020 | 3 replies
@Gustavo Juarez Really depends on a lot of personal goals, and risk tolerance.You have a couple options :If you are okay with taking on a challenge with a little more risk you can start trying to grow that capital stash even more and do an entry level flip.If you want something less risky but still want your money to not be immediately/fully tied up learn the ins and outs of the BRRRR strategy.
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1 August 2023 | 10 replies
@Bobby PaquetteIt's like having your own bank, where you can make money in two places at once by using a whole life insurance policy that grows and then you take a loan based on that policy's value to invest in real estate or other sweet deals.Here's how it works in simple terms:You make a deposit into your policy.You take out a loan using the policy's cash value as collateral.You invest that borrowed money Now, when you've got real estate deals exiting and giving you some cash, instead of stashing it in a low-yield bank account, you can pay off the loan on your policy and keep funding it.