
16 February 2025 | 18 replies
Hello Ivan,I do not work for BP, but my suggestion is that you follow the Build Your Investing Team link at the top of this page if you have not and follow each step including speaking with the prospective members of the team you want to build and with that I believe you will obtain the answers you need.

10 February 2025 | 24 replies
John,If you're looking for prospective tenants who may have section 8 later on let me know!

3 February 2025 | 6 replies
Other lease provisions may apply as well, such as prohibition against causing the LL to incur fines and damages.

26 February 2025 | 58 replies
I love researching good companies with good growth prospects and a long horizon to allow for compounding of value, much like finding a good property in a good area with good long term demographics in a friendly regulatory environment etc to allow for capital appreciation.

26 January 2025 | 21 replies
Let me enumerate the reasons:1) my pm paid for the damages.

31 January 2025 | 4 replies
You're building great social proof for prospects who you're already engaging with.

3 February 2025 | 3 replies
I ask to take a walk through and document the current condition as my agreement states they can not damage the property during this process. and of course don't give them anything until you have walked through verified they are out and have voluntarily handed over keys.

18 January 2025 | 19 replies
Those places were awful and barely habitable, but it is what S8 prospects are being offered.

3 March 2025 | 47 replies
A stretch to say you are presenting a useful alternative.What truly triggered my response was the notion that it was proper for nursing home/assisted living affiliates to have a preferred network of investors, much less that they would use billing and time pressure to steer their prospective patients there.

1 February 2025 | 4 replies
You Can Only Have 35 Non-Accredited InvestorsRule 506(b) allows an unlimited number of accredited investors but restricts you to only 35 non-accredited investors.However, there’s a catch:Non-accredited investors must be financially sophisticated.They must have enough experience to evaluate the investment risks.From the SEC:“Securities may not be sold to more than 35 non-accredited investors… [who] must meet the legal standard of having sufficient knowledge and experience in financial and business matters to be capable of evaluating the merits and risks of the prospective investment.”If you’re planning to include non-accredited investors, make sure they qualify—or you could be violating SEC rules.3.