Andrey Les
Invest in real estate or a franchise
5 September 2018 | 3 replies
Both sound like they can be good, but no one has a crystal ball.
Theodore Tongue
duplex long term rental in rural vacation area
31 May 2019 | 1 reply
There is no crystal ball for your problem.
Crystal Hammond
Wholesaling in Louisiana
1 June 2019 | 3 replies
@Crystal Hammond I would get educated on wholesaling and what’s entailed.
Robert Adams
NV is still one of the hottest markets in the country
8 August 2018 | 8 replies
No one has a crystal ball though so it is difficult to predict further than say 12 months or so (which still look strong).
Dave Carella
Bubble, Bubble, toil and trouble
15 August 2018 | 81 replies
When markets finally go down ( everyone can look at indicators but nobody has a crystal ball ) then investors can accelerate buying at the bottom.In commercial real estate Trumpenomics with his latest tax laws through 2022 is juicing the economy for more years past then a typical 8 to 10 year cycle period.
Jon B
Any problems with buying partials?
24 February 2019 | 4 replies
That way if you bought 60 payments and the borrower paid it off on month 20, its crystal clear what your payment is.
Johnny Pineyro
Oregon Declares Statewide Rent Control
4 April 2019 | 21 replies
My crystal ball is murky.
Crystal Place
[Calc Review] Help a fellow new investor analyze this deal!
4 March 2019 | 5 replies
Crystal
Chris Munichiello
Are prices set to start falling in MA
15 March 2019 | 12 replies
@Chris Munichiello The crystal ball isn't exactly my thing, but given the *severe* shortage of homes on the market, I expect prices to continue to climb in the short to medium term.As of Q4 2018, Suffolk County (Boston) was down to a 1.3 month supply.
Amber Gorzynski
Contractor for first walk-through
5 March 2019 | 3 replies
We were going to have a formal inspection done before making an offer just to be crystal-clear on what we would be dealing with, but the realtor suggested we save some time and money by having a contractor take a look to help us determine the repairs required, and subsequently how much we should offer.Is this pretty standard practice as far as "due diligence" goes?