
27 December 2024 | 8 replies
We do lower rates, and I'm curios if others have run into a "floor price" below which you just get problem guests.

26 December 2024 | 2 replies
@Tom HallAt 7% if you can I would pay it down as investing it net after tax gains may not get you the 7% you are paying - so it’s less riskDownside is you lose liquidity of that money as it’s tied in your propertyIf rates come down in future you can refinance and even take some of the cash out.Regarding your question are rates coming down, a lot of factors come into play but right now it does not appear there will be significant changes to rates over next 3-6 months.

27 December 2024 | 18 replies
@Dmitriy Fomichenko scratch the part about being taxed at the capital gains rate, you’re right that it is taxed at income levels, however the rest stands.

6 January 2025 | 38 replies
Each property comes with its own set of risks and every investor must understand those risks and do the minimum - get 3rd party inspections, 3rd party appraisals, verify rents, jobs and crime rates at city-data.com - before buying.

29 December 2024 | 2 replies
Interest rates are not coming down anytime soon.

2 January 2025 | 13 replies
It sets your expectation on the guest's rating and also tells them you care enough to make sure the stay deserves 5 stars.

1 January 2025 | 12 replies
A FHA 203k Loan is where the purchase price and rehab costs are rolled into a single loan.Assuming you have a respectable FICO you can buy, with a FHA Loan (3-5% down, a 30 year amortization schedule, and a residential loan rate) AND because you closed personally, you will not have Asset Protection, in the form of closing in the name of a LLC/ LLC taxed as an S Corp, or an S Corp.
1 January 2025 | 24 replies
It's crucial to choose a market with steady job growth, low vacancy rates, and tenant demand.

26 December 2024 | 15 replies
Is it worth to refi at current rates?

20 December 2024 | 10 replies
The longer the maturity rate of the bond, the higher the yield is to compensate an investor for the additional risk they are taking on with a longer dated bond.Stocks that pay divideneds....insurance companies have a lower yield than telecom stocks as a reflection that telecoms are higher risk than insurance companies.In the efficient market hypothesis, if markets are efficient then the yields should be reflective of the risk.