Kelly Williams
Refinancing a (somewhat) new loan
7 May 2013 | 9 replies
I once had a loan with PMI, though I had not paid down 20% of the purchase price, I had remodeled the interior and the market had rebounded.
Cordell Hinton-Brown
Undecided between Milwaukee and Houston!!! PLEASE HELP!
4 September 2015 | 8 replies
Of course, once oil rebounds ($70+), Houston will rebound.
Ramone Reese
Investor and Missouri-Licensed attorney and counselor at law
10 May 2016 | 9 replies
Like I mentioned, I reside in CA for now, but Detroit will always be home for me, as I've seen the city go through its worst, as well as strengthen and rebound as it is now.
Ethan Bruland
Stock Market or Another Rental?
16 February 2016 | 5 replies
Been fighting this for a while, and the market has shown a small rebound, so maybe it's time to exit.
Eric Eastman
Kiyosaki on Real Estate Guys Radio predicting massive crash
19 February 2017 | 90 replies
If that happens, then property owners will end up doing really well if they have strong cash flow and long term financing.I think the risk is for those who have shorter term or variable rate financing.End of the day I think there is still money to be made in real estate, if you buy something 10-20% below market and we get a 15-20% correction followed by a rebound 5-10 years later, its not catastrophic.
Tammy Laverty
Hi :) New here from NJ
7 January 2016 | 4 replies
I feel like getting into smart real estate investments would be a great way to rebound and then grow our finances from there.
Chris Reichelt
Buying Multifamily Apartment in Philly/ Cherry Hill
29 June 2018 | 5 replies
We fell out of contract on a 16-unit last month but rebounded quickly and have a week left on our DD for a 20-unit deal.
Tomer Maymon
A Typical SFR Project in San Francisco
3 May 2020 | 7 replies
I also hope covid-19 rebound will be as quick as the drop (there is less anxiety about it, more and more folks are shifting to Sweden approach).
Weis Sherdel
What Is Your Favorite City to Invest?
23 September 2018 | 4 replies
Price point: $70-100KCAP: 9.0%+Rent/Price: 1.3+Cash on Cash Return: 15%+I am really interested in Dallas and Houston because of strong macro-economic fundamentals like job and population growth, but have heard that both markets 'are farther along the recovery cycle and that means home prices have rebounded to a point where cap rates are suppressed.'
Jerry Padilla
Article Indicating the Locations with the Greatest Rent Increases
30 January 2016 | 8 replies
Now that prices have rebounded, people with equity positions are selling.