Henry Clark
Belize Teak Plantation
4 January 2025 | 67 replies
I made this same mistake when I went to buy "Sweet" Corn for the dinner I threw last time I was there. 5 ears for $10.
Sam Epperson
What are the next steps after creating a seller finance note?
6 December 2024 | 3 replies
EDIT: Just realized I read that wrong and thought the poster was the seller. 5% rate and 5% down is a sweet deal, take that if you can get it!
Justin Boyd
Raw land in small wine town
12 December 2024 | 10 replies
however I suspect the wines of Ohio are probably sweet wines fruit wines etc .. your not talking about top end cabs and pinot and chard etc..
Alyssa Dinson
What has been your experience with out of state investing?
16 January 2025 | 78 replies
If you do it right, it’s arguably the best market to invest.Purchase: $80k-$130kRent: $1100-$1500 (no rent control in MI)1% rule: .9%-1.4% rule dealsCoc ROI: 5-12%Total ROI: 20-40%Cash flow: $50-$250/door (after all expenses and budgeting for maint, capex, vacancy)Appreciation: 3-10%+ (has been double digit for a decade)Location: C+, B-These numbers are based on the “sweet spot” in Metro Detroit.
Scott Zeiger
Appliances
17 December 2024 | 29 replies
$900 seems to be the sweet spot right now and most of those cost 45-55K including fix-up.With all that said, I'm positive I spend money on the properties in ways that most landlords at these price points do not.
Hector Espinosa
If You Were to Start Investing from Scratch in 2025, What Would You Do Differently?
14 December 2024 | 42 replies
i keep seeing:1. buy out of state rental in a solid neighborhood with long-term potential (just as you are recommending) but then...2. have one rough tenant turn that costs a couple grand, and3. give up on real estate investing, and turn on everyone involved in the transaction for not guaranteeing that sweet cash flow in month 1 lol, yea there is a decent chunk of investors who get really butthurt by that one bad unit turn and just give up.
Heather McNicol
BNB Investor Academy - Reviews?
31 December 2024 | 76 replies
We started 6 years ago, and I wouldn't recommend doing arbitrage unless you get a pretty sweet deal.
Sam Lewis
Why would hard money lenders trust someone they don't know?
2 December 2024 | 10 replies
Borrower Types: The Professional - HM Lender will cut sweet-heart deals to keep these borrowers around Experienced real estate investors Regularly engage in property transactions Typically have a track record of successful projects The Newbie - Charge Higher everything as the risk is higher as no experience Novice investors or first-time borrowers Limited experience in real estate Seeking to build their investment portfolio The Deadbeat - Only lend if the deal is so SWEET, they can't lose if they take the property from the Borrower Borrowers with poor credit history or financial difficulties High-risk borrowers May struggle to secure traditional financingThe lender will do an application on the deal/borrower and some standard docs they require are:Hard Money Application / ExperiencePurchase contractARV report – COMPS – See * Redfin*Pictures of Property – most people use Dropbox to shareProof of Funds – Down / Reserves (Bank Statements)Personal identification (ID or passport)But usually if the deal is sweet enough, they will do it anyway because if the deal goes south, there is so much equity/value in the property that the HM lender can't lose.
Kent Fang ching
Guidance on OOS markets to get into
24 December 2024 | 44 replies
If you do it right, it’s arguably the best market to invest.Purchase: $80k-$130kRent: $1100-$1500 (no rent control in MI)1% rule: .9%-1.4% rule dealsCoc ROI: 5-12%Total ROI: 20-40%Cash flow: $50-$250/door (after all expenses and budgeting for maint, capex, vacancy)Appreciation: 3-10%+ (has been double digit for a decade)Location: C+, B-These numbers are based on the “sweet spot” in Metro Detroit.