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22 December 2022 | 3 replies
I suspect a lot of the same philosophy that you would have with glamping would apply, while also allowing people to visit on a short term and learn more about Tiny House living.
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22 February 2022 | 48 replies
It sounds like this might be you, but for me at some point I do not want to have to deal with the every day stress of it all.This means investing in things like syndications, for example, that have an investment philosophy that you agree with.
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17 December 2018 | 5 replies
So there are already some entities that can answer that question for you in a way.Also, most investors like the Bigger Pockets philosophy of the "BRRR".
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14 March 2013 | 49 replies
My father had the same philosophy as your father, and he died millions of dollars poorer for it.
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24 March 2017 | 143 replies
Those making 50k a year at the job wanting to replace that income with cash flow so they can move to real estate full time will be focused on higher cash flow even if more time intensive.Those making 500k a year tend to have a different investing philosophy.
6 June 2016 | 12 replies
We have different philosophies on RE investing and on the one project that we did together, we fought EVERY step of the way.
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17 January 2016 | 23 replies
I'd like to network and more preferably even partner up (Match Funds) with other investors who share likeminded investment philosophies.
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4 December 2017 | 28 replies
@Steve Vaughan @Jd Martin @Jay Hinrichs (he’s prolly to busy, but hey it’s my wish list) @Joe Villeneuve (although I disagree with his leverage philosophy, I still wanna chat with him) Prolly more I’m forgeting.
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25 November 2017 | 6 replies
If your philosophies are way off, ask if they can screen differently for your properties or you might need to find another property manager.
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1 March 2018 | 26 replies
Or your building may have a "surprise" issue that costs you tens of thousands of dollars to fix (but hopefully one has healthy cash reserves to cover these issues when they pop up).Also, past performance itself is easier to see transparently with a rental property than with a publicly-traded company.Even as a CPA, sometimes when I read the financial statements and annual reports of publicly-traded companies, I'm left wondering what kind of tricks they're playing on the inside to make themselves look better than they really are.But with a property, the due diligence is a lot more straightforward.But of course all these advantages of property come at the cost of investing a significantly larger portion of your wealth into a single, illiquid asset than you would if you wanted to invest in a single, liquid stock.Anyway I rambled a bit there, but my personal philosophy is that both equities and real estate are incredible wealth-building tools, but similar to @Andrew Johnson I am much more "active" in real estate.