
22 April 2020 | 4 replies
I used to be very resistant to making changes/improvements, but, I have found the more I do them, the better my average tenant.

28 April 2020 | 10 replies
It has a solid recession-resistant employment base (#1 state gov and #2 hospital system) and I think Concord has done a great job investing in and revitalizing its downtown over the last several years, making it an attractive urban area.
28 April 2020 | 7 replies
Also, being a military investor myself, it is relatively recession resistant as well.

23 April 2020 | 6 replies
I've been a longtime lurker and fringe real estate investor who sees great value and positivity in the Bigger Pockets community but, for whatever reason, have resisted truly jumping into the forums/community until now.

18 October 2021 | 33 replies
Like I said earlier, I think Pueblo is going to get hurt more than Denver and Colorado Springs, only because, even though it has a lot of primary industries, they are less recession resistant than are available up north (I mean, Denver has the state capital and Politics are always in season, it seems).

3 May 2020 | 42 replies
I personally would rather wait until then (and am focusing instead on virus resistant asset classes).

20 June 2020 | 10 replies
The longer you wait to address the tenants on the changes, the more resistant they will be.

17 June 2020 | 7 replies
We were named one of the top ten recession resistant cities for 2020, and in the last month Amazon signed a new lease here and Tesla is in the process of negotiating a deal for a factory.

15 June 2020 | 0 replies
In some cases, landlords are very resistant.