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11 December 2024 | 13 replies
I am 18 year old so I got planty of time and really energetic about real estate but I don't have any capital to invest so yeah wholesaling is the only option what would you do If you were 18 again with all your current investing experience
7 December 2024 | 2 replies
I would like to invest here but there are two large hurdles: Negative cashflow down paymentI feel that Boston is a fantastic city to invest in.....if you are well capitalized.
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6 December 2024 | 9 replies
Do you have short-term capital to continue to invest in your next deal?
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10 December 2024 | 8 replies
Crowdfunding or real estate syndications also pool capital from multiple investors.
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9 December 2024 | 5 replies
As for taxes, they only delay capital gains, not reduce them entirely.
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5 December 2024 | 10 replies
Thus, you kick any capital gains down the road. 5) The best part of the law says that once it has been an investment for a certain number of years, you can actually move into it, and once you have owned it for a certain number of years, the capital gains you kicked down the road can be rolled into the capital gains that is exempt as your personal residence.
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7 December 2024 | 12 replies
Unless you absolutely love flipping I have often seen it is a means to generate short-term capital that you can then put into rentals (aka long term wealth).
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12 December 2024 | 49 replies
Right now I'm focusing on building up rentals in the states & doing some flips to raise more capital.
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5 December 2024 | 3 replies
It’s a win-win: investors get the capital they need to grow their portfolios, and lenders earn competitive returns with a relatively low-risk investment.It’s worth considering if you're looking for more funding options or better returns!
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17 December 2024 | 20 replies
Hi Scott, consider USFR for zero risk cash, earns 5.4% holding 8 week Floating rate note US treasuriesor for mild risk cash, consider BKN - BlackRock's Muni fund, earns 5.6% tax free, which for you would be >9% tax-equivalent yield, and if rates fall, the BKN etf will rise considerably, which though will be capital gains taxable :(, It holds intermediate term Municipals that are all GO, general obligation, so they can always tax us dumb schmuck citizens to pay off the notes instead of defaulting, so low risk but not zero risk for cash. ie (Orange county '90s)Inflation has already resolved, the 3 month trailing core PCE is at 1.5%, well below FEDs 2% target, so they will likely start cutting soon as the 12 month trail falls in line, that's why Powell changed his verbiage so much last Wednesday, and FOMC minutes speak of 150 bp cuts before the end of December as their expectation per their Dot Plots, the only question remaining is consumer spending,(>60% US economy), if falling like McDonalds/Starbucks/Uber saying then unemployment will accelerate and then possible recession, then 10yr yield falls even more, and bonds values would rise like Mike just said above.