
3 February 2022 | 26 replies
Do you believe it adequately prepares someone to begin multifamily syndication?

9 January 2020 | 3 replies
So you're saying your "business" had so many losses, you don't show an adequate income to qualify for a loan?

28 February 2024 | 12 replies
Find a property, sketch out the finances of the deal to see whether it will provide adequate returns and if not move on to the next deal.We evaluate dozens of properties every year but typically buy only 1 or 2.

17 April 2019 | 74 replies
I understand that landlords have an obligation to provide fair and adequate housing for tenants... but the journalist who wrote this propaganda heavy piece obviously has not made an effort to seek out the investor's perspective on the matter.The low income housing investor deals with substantially higher risk than the B & A class property buyer.

1 September 2018 | 15 replies
It's no where near adequate for the demands of a modern house.

30 June 2017 | 88 replies
But the way I read her comment , was basically agreeing with what he thought might be the OTHER reason the test worked, and that in fact his wife was good, or at the very least adequate enough at dealing with lenders therefore it wasn't discrimination.

5 May 2018 | 53 replies
Only with in-depth experience, understanding, and due diligence can you adequately decrease that risk to make the high return worth it.

13 August 2023 | 27 replies
I was going to write a whole explanation on what the true term means however, I found the Investopedia adequately addresses the true definition of the term "Bird Dog" - please review and I will comment below:Definition of 'Bird Dog'[i]A real estate investing term that refers to someone who spends their time trying to locate properties with substantial investment potential.

30 April 2017 | 8 replies
Should remove the base board to insure there is adequate coverage but a wide (3/4) may be sufficient coverage.

28 October 2017 | 3 replies
I find myself as a landlord, depending on the reason for breaking a lease, try to give a tenant a break - by imposing a lesser penalty than stipulated in the lease IF I was given adequate notice prior AND it's something beyond anyone's control such as a job transfer or family situations etc...AND the tenant has been a good tenant all along...So in such a case I gave "Joe" a break and didn't charge the full penalty agreed to in the lease.Now tenant "Bill" who lives next door to "Joe" wants to break the lease and I referenced the early termination terms and clauses are all clearly stated in the lease agreement but he said "I heard that Joe didn't have to do that..."