24 November 2016 | 9 replies
Accredited investors only please.
18 November 2015 | 24 replies
So if the OP were to partner up with an HML, does he have to be an accredited investor to approach the HML if he doesn't have a previous personal relationship?

8 August 2015 | 1 reply
Do they have to be accredited investors?

1 September 2015 | 35 replies
I was a licensed realtor, that wanted to find a company that catered to investors and wound up finding a real estate company that was accredited by the BBB and happened to do wholesale deals.

21 August 2017 | 39 replies
@Todd Dexheimer, DSTs are typically only available to accredited investors.
26 March 2018 | 42 replies
More experienced accredited investors know the risks and can make decisions faster.

21 February 2019 | 21 replies
Don't forget that most syndications require you to be accredited.

30 August 2017 | 6 replies
Women only teams are great but restricting ourselves to that might compromise our opportunities to learn.Their M1 group is for non-accredited investors whereas the regular one is for accredited investors.
5 September 2017 | 10 replies
if your an accredited investor the syndication approach is one that is quite popular.. and of course those deals the sponsor frankly is more important than the asset most of the time. a poor operator can ruin a good project a great operator can save a struggly project or one that has some bumps in the road.crowdfunding is an option one thing though that I don't like about crowdfunding at least on smaller debt deals is there is a huge heard mentality and the debt deals once posted sometimes are subscribed in 30 minutes.. no way anyone can do due diligence on those.. its like throwing darts at a board..

10 June 2014 | 21 replies
, but is there any limit SEC wise preventing non-accredited investors from investing?