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27 November 2018 | 23 replies
I assume this also means you’re going to go to the various supply stores, shop for everything and get it to the job site?
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18 November 2018 | 6 replies
@Chester Straley Then research the supply and demand for the area and see how much income you can generate.
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14 December 2018 | 17 replies
Go to your local electrical supply house, where the pros go to get their supplies and tools.
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21 November 2018 | 165 replies
Supply and demand and competition causes there to be a balance.
19 November 2018 | 9 replies
You’ll need to sell some food, sandwiches, muffins, etc too I would think....coolers, display cases/coolers, dishes, dishwashers, supplies, costs for labor, rent, utilities, insurance, licenses, permits, inspections, etc, etc.
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30 November 2018 | 11 replies
It's really a shame because the code where I own my investment property does not have an owner-occupancy restriction to permit an ADU--as it should be if a town wants to increase the supply of housing!
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18 November 2018 | 0 replies
Consider the following scenario, presented by a question.Buyer 1 and Buyer 2 live in a low supply high demand multi family housing area.
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19 November 2018 | 5 replies
It seems to me there is a huge supply from people renting these so that makes the price to rent these cheap.
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19 November 2018 | 0 replies
https://www.har.com/content/newsroom/Houston Real Estate Highlights in October Single-family home sales increased 4.7 percent year-over-year, with 6,716 units sold;Days on Market (DOM) for single-family homes was 57 versus 61 a year earlier;Total property sales rose 6.0 percent, with 8,127 units sold;Total dollar volume jumped 9.3 percent to $2.3 billion;The single-family home median price climbed 3.6 percent to $234,653, an October high;The single-family home average price also achieved an October record, rising 3.5 percent to $294,500;Single-family homes months of inventory reached a 3.9-months supply, up fractionally from 3.7 months last October, but below the national supply of 4.4 months reported by NAR;Townhome/condominium sales dropped 2.9 percent, with the average price up 4.9 percent to $206,838 and the median price down 2.2 percent at $152,900;Leases of single-family homes rose 7.3 percent with the average rent down 1.1 percent to $1,754;Volume of townhome/condominium leases fell 6.8 percent with the average rent up 1.2 percent to $1,550.
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4 January 2019 | 24 replies
@Anand S. everything that was already said PLUS (something to keep in mind AND continue to watch as government policy changes) is the unskilled / semi-skilled labor supply.