
22 July 2024 | 28 replies
You may have even dropped investments due to their excessive volatility.That’s why our fund diversifies across various sectors, like Broadway, offering you 12% fixed returns on your promissory note investments.

22 July 2024 | 34 replies
I was going to say On DMonte, which is listed, aside from keep dropping price, all the way to break-even point (mortgage balance) eventually there isn't much else you can do, but I just saw its showing pending online... so did you manage to get it in escrow?
21 July 2024 | 15 replies
In terms of up and coming locations....If you drop a pin anywhere in Middle Tn it's going to be a "hot spot" in the near future if it already hasn't become one.

22 July 2024 | 13 replies
If that is the case, the buyer would probably drop out unless they are an investor.

21 July 2024 | 9 replies
This idea that something is wrong because rents are dropping is just misplaced.

22 July 2024 | 71 replies
His jaw dropped and said you just made $500 , I told him no , I just made $900 .
23 July 2024 | 42 replies
And I suppose so one did not have to drop all the cash one could find a leasing company to finance through..

19 July 2024 | 2 replies
Obviously mortgage rates dropping is ideal and would allow for a portion of the $250k down payment to be pulled back out (cash out refi) all while keeping rents pretty close to constant.

18 July 2024 | 0 replies
I just got the notification from the city that there is a new apartment complex that will come up right in front of my house. It will be a brand new construction as it is vacant land right now. We are wondering if the...

19 July 2024 | 13 replies
Take a look at the study from Amsterdam. by Piet Eichholtz Eichholtz_A-long-run-house-price-index.pdf (maastrichtrealestate.com)basically a nearly 400 year study of the prices of the same homes along the best canals in Amsterdam since 1628, and the prices rose at about 2-3% or the historic rate of inflation there, same study has been retroactively and proactively studied in almost all countries on Earth and they all get same answers over long term, (Re rises with inflation rate) Now you can have short term bubbles like now in USA, but they usually deflate like the 22% drop from 1929-1935 or the 34% drop from 2006 to 2012, which many of us benefitted from.