
31 July 2024 | 19 replies
Are you looking for consistent income?

2 August 2024 | 18 replies
The key is to build your portfolio slowly but consistently, focusing on quality over quantity. shervinrealtor.com

31 July 2024 | 19 replies
The appraisals that consisting come in close to what a property actually sells for are where the subject is an income producing property being run on a consistently and providing consistent cash flow.

1 August 2024 | 7 replies
If you consistently analyze properties, recognizing a good deal will be much easier when it shows up.

1 August 2024 | 16 replies
@Wayne Lee When rates were super low 2 years ago, and prices hadn't totally spiked, many investors got lazy because almost they could buy anything on the MLS at asking price and cashflow as a rental.As prices went up, many investors started investing in STRs to get properties at asking price to cashflow.Now, many are chasing Class C properties to get them to cashflow at asking price.What consistencies do you see in all three of those scenarios?

1 August 2024 | 12 replies
Why buy the real estate equivalent of a penny stock when you can afford to buy blue chip aristocrat dividend stocks (Class A multifamily properties in good locations with actual strong fundamentals like population growth, a diverse and recession-resistant job market, limited supply and high demand, affordability, and consistent long-term appreciation)?

31 July 2024 | 40 replies
Quote from @Josh Green: I personally am buying and helping clients buy in the Tampa Bay Area for a few reasons:Here, you have a historically strong and consistent tourism presence, limited land/STR allowable areas, highly liquid property compared to selling a cabin in the woods, all 9 classes of visitors in the STR sector, and appreciation.

31 July 2024 | 4 replies
Consistency and follow up is key.
31 July 2024 | 5 replies
Thank you all for your wisdom, it seems consistent that the Heloc for a deposit only makes the most sense.

31 July 2024 | 3 replies
Steady appreciation: While not experiencing the dramatic spikes of some markets, Midwest real estate has shown consistent, stable growth over time.3.