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7 February 2025 | 1 reply
With high home prices, rising mortgage rates, and intense market competition, securing a property has become increasingly difficult.A recent survey found that over 60% of real estate agents reported instances where Gen Z buyers lost out on homes due to delayed decision-making, missed appointments, or hesitation in making offers.
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23 February 2025 | 4 replies
Highly appreciated.Does that mean I can deduct this loss from any rental profit from any of my properties or should it be just deducted from the same property income in the future year?
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19 February 2025 | 1 reply
$3000 sounds pretty high to me for the area.Downside is you're renting to someone who can't pay rent...and has money challenges.
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26 February 2025 | 22 replies
Tenant Default: 0-5% probability of eviction or early lease termination.Section 8: Class A rents are too high and won’t be approved.Vacancies: 5-10%, depending on market conditions.Cashflow vs Appreciation: Typically, 3-5 years for positive cashflow, but you get highest relative rent & value appreciation.Class B Properties:Tenant Pool: Majority of FICO scores 620-680, some blemishes, no convictions/evictions in last 5 years.Tenant Default: 5-10% probability of eviction or early lease termination.Vacancies: 10-15%, depending on market conditions.Cashflow vs Appreciation: Typically, 1-3 years for positive cashflow, balanced amounts of relative rent & value appreciation.Section 8: Class B rents are usually too high for the Section 8 program.Class C Properties:Tenant Pool: Majority of FICO scores 560-620, many blemishes, but should have no convictions/evictions in last 3 years.
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9 February 2025 | 8 replies
Building on existing land helps eliminate the issue of land scarcity, which is a significant challenge due to California’s high real estate prices.
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20 January 2025 | 8 replies
There is a lot of public info out there on their funds and how they are (not) performing.
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24 February 2025 | 16 replies
Once you go above $125k/unit you start to get into the high end areas that won't have very good rent/price ratios and are under the 1% rule mark for turnkey stuff.Neighborhood wise in the city the "East End" is where the most expensive real estate is since that's where the universities and a lot of the hospitals are located.
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20 February 2025 | 21 replies
A good PM can often get higher rent to offset their cost because they manage at arms length compared to the owner who may be worried about charging market because it’s “too high”.
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10 February 2025 | 7 replies
@Paul Cijunelis thank you for this response Paul, well I firstly got interested in CRE when one of my high school teachers told me about how he does it and that kind of started my interest, I really love CRE because I've noticed it's a very lucrative and risky business like high risk high reward, but not just that I really love seeing a bunch of properties being brought back to life with renovations.
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13 February 2025 | 10 replies
For the high cost areas like Palo Alto it is difficult to get a property to cashflow out the gate because rents have not caught up with the cost.