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9 October 2023 | 8 replies
Seek advice, start small, and be patient for gradual real estate wealth.
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23 October 2023 | 21 replies
I guess you are right to say South Central is a C neighborhood, but it definitely has gradually improved over the last 10 years.
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23 October 2023 | 1 reply
Should I gradually raise rents and upset tenants from multiple rent raises?
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20 October 2023 | 1 reply
They see the labor market is tight, but is gradually cooling (Should they pause to observe?).
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26 May 2015 | 157 replies
I think the expected gradual increases in interest rates will lead to a low/no gains scenario as things like higher wages/inflation counteract the affect of the increase in interest rates.
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7 September 2022 | 9 replies
I think they're going to continue to gradually climb as people adjust to the new costs of labor and materials.
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5 November 2021 | 694 replies
It took them 3 months to gradually begin to get people back to work.
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24 September 2023 | 15 replies
The price is whatever is normal for your market, try looking on Furnished Finders for your property type in the are and go 200 bucks lower than what you see listed. 200 lower is an arbitrary amount but remember you are seeing what is for rent not what is currently rented, so to get it filled quicker I drop the price then gradually raise it throughout later stays.
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1 November 2017 | 73 replies
I’m not recommending an FA, I just wanted to point out that the fiduciary law actually went into effect on June 9, to be gradually implemented over the next 1.5 years and go into full effect on July 1, 2019.Anyway, I studied Finance and went through the interview process to be a FA with a few companies before dropping out after deciding it wasn’t for me.
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14 March 2023 | 59 replies
Here are my options (and I'm sure people have others): 1) Sell something. 2) do a lower interest 15 year equity loan at 7% (that won’t be interest only) on the home with the higher HELOC interest (which is interest only), pay off that HELOC, and then gradually pay down the loan.3) I could refi the full loan to a 7 Year ARM at 5.75% which is what I was quoted at. 4) 1031 exchange everything and buy something elseThanks all