
15 September 2022 | 36 replies
Once again, kudos to you for so much thorough due diligence and jumping in with both feet to a promising market that’s overlooked (still) by many New England investors due to perceptions that are a decade out of date.

9 June 2021 | 154 replies
Drive around looking for distressed properties that are off the market and contact owners.In any case, those are just some of the things that I did when starting out.I’m actually a New Englander who married into an Ohio family, and have been here ever since.

17 June 2021 | 123 replies
These countries (England, France, Germany, etc.) would never force individuals (landlords) to reward (settle) with law breakers (tenants) of course provided the evidence of law/lease breaches.

2 June 2023 | 22 replies
I know a very successful guy out Boston way who would call that New England frugalness--left over door board, use it for a back splash and a wall covering--leave nothing to waste.The doors and drawers on the cabinets look less wide then most cabinets I've seen in Home depot, and they seem to work in the space--size wise.You could replace the doors--look online for cabinet doors, and maybe use some normal hinges that are on the inside of the door, vs. the outside.BUT I think this would rent in someplace like San Antonio (I've seen much worse), will it pass muster in Beantown (???)

5 March 2022 | 3 replies
That is just me speculating, based on my knowledge of real estate common law over the past 900 years going back to King Henry II of England (1133 - 1189) up to the present and "how things work."

5 August 2022 | 3 replies
Yes Charlotte is awesome, I was actually born there and then my parents work brought me up to New England, but every time I visit Charlotte it feels like home.

11 February 2024 | 3 replies
Hey Everyone,I am looking to connect with some other investors/groups in the New England area, I live and operate a couple properties in NH and VT.

26 October 2008 | 2 replies
Interest rate futures show a majority of market players leaning towards a 100 basis point cut rather than 75 basis points [FEDWATCH].This would follow an emergency 50 basis point cut earlier this month and leave federal fund rates as low as a wafer-thin 0.5 percent.Reuters polls also show economists are expecting a half point cut from the Bank of England's next meeting on Nov. 6 [BOE/INT] and at least 25 basis points from the European Central Bank [ECB/INT] by the end of the year.

2 February 2015 | 59 replies
Go New England Patriots!!!

18 February 2016 | 31 replies
@Grace Porritt think about the gouging in the hotel industry.. rent a room in new England during the color season.. its 2 to 3 times as much as other times. were I think the air Bnb might be more consitant price wise .. although I bet there was some big dollars dropped in the Silicon valley for the super bow.