Account Closed
Seller Fiancing as a retirement strategy
8 June 2010 | 53 replies
It has become part of my blood.
Liz Faircloth
Healthcare Sharing Program - Any experience?
11 December 2018 | 11 replies
THey actually do pay for a lot; they have paid for everything I have submitted including blood work and surgery.
Cam Bare
Florida Keys Short term Vacation Rentals
17 October 2022 | 9 replies
My partner and I spent years, months and even traveled all over the Keys in our RV to do our due diligence before we found our nest eggs, but we did all this buying before the prices went sky-rocking.I had a friend who is in the home appraisal business (someone who should know better) he was caught renting outside the laws/regs. and they fined him $10,000 (too rich for my blood – LOL).
Tim Coppola
Applicant has a Chapter 7 Bankruptcy on record
9 September 2021 | 7 replies
She is not getting him plastic surgery, its blood transfusions!
Lana Ly
Choosing between two qualified contractors
11 December 2023 | 6 replies
Search their names and companies names on your favorite search engine to see if there's bad blood out there.
Tyler Davis
What an upcoming drop in rates will do for investors in 2024
11 December 2023 | 2 replies
The data taken between Nov and Dec isn't going to be all that helpful as those two months are always slow.If rates do go down to around 5ish there will once again be blood in the water.
Chris Hixon
PNW real estate noobie
19 November 2023 | 9 replies
We got out of the expensive rent for an expensive mortgage but are putting our blood, sweat and tears into making our dreams come true.
Brandon Dwight
Deceased uncle's home foreclosed on. I am next of kin and have questions.
29 December 2023 | 10 replies
Hi,My uncle (blood-related) owned a home in southern Massachusetts.
David Kieta
The Doom Loop in Chicago
6 October 2023 | 30 replies
When there's blood on street like now, it's good time to invest *selectively* at public company as their valuation is very bad right now.
Colter DeVries
Successful syndication models in the real estate industry
14 November 2023 | 6 replies
Historical asset appreciation on ranchlands is 4-6% with a wider variance above 6 due to changes in consumer tastes and preferences, as well as crazy post-2020 conditions, but generally and historically if you hold for 10 years you will likely hit 6% CAGR on the ranchland asset.Banks are lending at 6% but P&I is difficult to cash flow for the borrower/operator with operating net margins of 10% (on all capital assets).I understand we are all in a funky time of low cap rates and high interest rates, so in trying to be creative squeezing blood from a stone, is there a demand on the investor side for assuming the risk in order to obtain the appreciation and tax benefits with historically low volatility?