
31 January 2015 | 20 replies
Of course, they advertise that they will give you all these secrets at the free seminar; they even advertised freebies like digital cameras at the door....but, as the old saying goes "nothing is for free".

16 September 2015 | 2 replies
I'm considering to invest in real estate in Kiev once the situation is cleared up there.But there are a few hurdles that I'm not sure how to master them.My situation:I made around 7 digits on the stock market and I don't have a fixed income and never had, and wont have anytime soon.

13 August 2019 | 29 replies
It's not impossible, but there's a very small percentage (I'm thinking single digit percentages) of sellers that list on the MLS who are willing or able to do a LO.

24 October 2014 | 70 replies
After deciding to jump into being a landlord and after lot of hard work now I have a portfolio of 50 units apartments generating 6 digits cash flow per year.

19 September 2017 | 298 replies
Walk into any financial advisors office right now and ask what investment is going to pay a double digit return with less than a $50k investment, that you won't have to manage or put any labor into.

4 April 2007 | 0 replies
What about a digital camera to pick pictures of the property?

9 May 2007 | 4 replies
I think their term of "flipping" is referring to the speculative "investors" that put deposits down on homes, then sold them months later for 5 digit or 6 digit profits."

24 May 2007 | 6 replies
You can't just simply buy a house slap paint on it, new landscaping, floor and expect to sell it for 5 digit profits.We all know that the subprime fallout has caused lenders to force many into foreclosure, these numbers are only expected to grow through the next 1-3 years.So would it be wise to think if you were looking to get into the flip market that these foreclosures would have the potential to be a profitable investment?

25 March 2008 | 21 replies
I work in 100+ and single digit temperatures.

11 June 2007 | 22 replies
Mike,You do realize that this is part 2 of a two part response---please see my previous post for my rationalization---it has been quite some time since we have seen double digit inflation (early 80's), but that was the prevailing trend at the time (rents raise with inflation).