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11 June 2024 | 7 replies
Working on the rest.We rank them by Class A, B, C & D.If you apply Class A assumptions to a Class B or C purchase, your expectations won’t be met and it may be a financial disaster.So, we recommend you first figure out the property Class you want to invest in, THEN figure out the corresponding location to invest in.Here’s our OPINION for the Metro Detroit market (always verify each area for yourself!)
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12 June 2024 | 20 replies
Recommend you first figure out the property Class/Risk you want to invest in, THEN figure out the corresponding location to invest in.If you apply Class A assumptions to a Class B or C purchase, your expectations won’t be met and it may be a financial disaster.So, when investing in areas they don’t really know, investors should research the different property Class submarkets.
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10 June 2024 | 5 replies
@Roxane WarbyRecommend you first figure out the property Class you want to invest in, THEN figure out the corresponding location to invest in.If you apply Class A assumptions to a Class B or C purchase, your expectations won’t be met and it may be a financial disaster.So, when investing in areas they don’t really know, investors should research the different property Class submarkets.
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10 June 2024 | 8 replies
A Real Real Estate AnalogyI am starting my real estate adventure and I am trying to draw a comparison from paper assets (stocks, bonds, notes, T-bills, crypto, etc.) with real estate.For those who know a bit more than me (and i know this will vary by person) but what are corresponding "tech stocks" (AMZN, AAPL, NVDA, FB, GOOG, etc.) of real estate?
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10 June 2024 | 27 replies
In alphabetical order: Cleveland, Columbus, Detroit, Indianapolis, St Louis, Texas and more.Before deciding you should do some research and learn about property Classes.Most investors naively assume all properties & tenants are the same and mistakenly only focus on best rent-to-price ratios.The reality is that lower Property Classes also mean lower Tenant Classes and corresponding bigger challenges!
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11 June 2024 | 14 replies
You could reach out to Kevin Kim at Geraci LLP in CA who's firm does securities and PML law in all states and is intimate with CA, OR, WA, and ID laws as well as corresponding state specific financial institutions governance (in WA it's called DFI or Department of Financial Institutions) and how to navigate their expectations accordingly...
10 June 2024 | 20 replies
@Sam GuptaRecommend you first figure out the property Class you want to invest in, THEN figure out the corresponding location to invest in.If you apply Class A assumptions to a Class B or C purchase, your expectations won’t be met and it may be a financial disaster.So, when investing in areas they don’t really know, investors should research the different property Class submarkets.
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8 June 2024 | 8 replies
@Sandy Keller I don’t put my address on any of my leases or correspondence.
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6 June 2024 | 8 replies
@Sehyun Lim Recommend you first figure out the property Class you want to invest in, THEN figure out the corresponding location to invest in.If you apply Class A assumptions to a Class B or C purchase, your expectations won’t be met and it may be a financial disaster.So, when investing in areas they don’t really know, investors should research the different property Class submarkets.
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6 June 2024 | 1 reply
The only real challenge we ran into was the seller originally wanted to set this up as a illegal duplex so there were multiple electric panels and corresponding wiring so that was going to have to be removed and redone in a single family format.