
20 July 2024 | 9 replies
For furnishing short- or mid-term rentals, finding the right balance between stuff that looks good, but which also offers solid durability and keeps your budget in check can be difficult.If your budget is your driving factor with your design decisions, I'd start surfing on Google image search or Pinterest - find a picture of a finished room that you like, and then reverse engineer it from products on Amazon and other similar budget-friendly sources.

20 July 2024 | 14 replies
@Jennifer LexonTo find a move-in ready property in Cleveland, Indiana, Kansas City, Memphis, and Pittsburgh, consider factors like affordable real estate prices, steady economic growth, strong rental markets, diverse neighborhoods, and diverse economies.

20 July 2024 | 28 replies
This is what ChatGPT has to say about post scarcity:"Predicting the exact timing of post-scarcity is challenging because it depends on numerous factors including technological advancements, economic policies, social attitudes, and environmental considerations.

20 July 2024 | 59 replies
Not factoring in these items in your analysis "hides" your actual return as these expenses will come up eventually.

20 July 2024 | 15 replies
It definitely depends on a lot of factors - where non-QM is generally going to be about 0.5%-1% higher in rate, but can be more than that or even lower than conventional with some more options - one in particular is if you did a longer prepayment penalty period (5 years - at a descending penalty structure or even 5% all five years), then that could drive the rate down even significantly lower than the conventional alternative.

19 July 2024 | 4 replies
However, several factors come into play, such as state laws, regulations, asset protection strategies and costs (widely different, e.g., California vs.

19 July 2024 | 0 replies
The combination of these factors made it an attractive opportunity for us.

19 July 2024 | 2 replies
So how do you calculate that after 9 years of owning, how does the equity come into play since most of the calculators assume it's year one with no equity, and how do I factor in the already paid assessments besides that it's increased the cost of the property?

19 July 2024 | 4 replies
Could be done, but very carefully.Talk to an attorney to get specific advice, because there are many factors that can dramatically change what you should do.Calling a loan because of the due on sale clause is rare, but does happen.
23 July 2024 | 42 replies
Scalability is the rarest of factors to be tapped in REI, and every "big wig" has unlocked that but for some reason nobody ever seems to mention that piece.