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Results (6,689+)
Katie Greenman Contribute to Roth or put that towards real estate investing goal
9 March 2022 | 118 replies
This is what I did and it was an amazing decision.REI, if done right, can easily return 25% or more in year one and over 6% compound growth because of appreciation and increase rent rate.
Greg Scott Biden Eviction Moratorium
8 February 2021 | 154 replies
🙄But you are immensely privileged.
Cameron H. Forbis why do people hate landlords?
10 April 2021 | 82 replies
Oh and you have to pay him hundreds or thousands of dollars every month and act like it's a privilege to do so, and you might have to pay even more money for housing basically whenever this guy feels like he can get away with it.
Tyler Kuyrkendall New Investor from Birmingham, Alabama
6 November 2019 | 16 replies
I'm really interested in the BRRRR method, because you can compound your portfolio so quickly. 
Janis Mcquinton Using Equity to pay off current debts
11 February 2019 | 6 replies
There is a good little book on that: The Compound Effect by Darren Hardy. 
Jeremy Johnson Development idea and opportunity in Charlotte NC
15 July 2020 | 16 replies
And having a natural water source is going to compound that issue. 
Brandon Taylor david greene's argument for paying down mortgage faster
14 February 2022 | 21 replies
* option 1: hold cash    * this is just cumulative cashflow that you save up (add up cashflow every month)    * counting cash balances in net worth, this increases net worth by amount of cash saved every month (call it x)  * option 2: throw cash flow at principal on mortgage    * this decreases your liabilities (mortgage balance) by the exact amount that you would have increased your net worth by holding cash    * decreasing liabilities by x is same as increasing net worth by x, since net worth = assets - liabilities      * so at this point, we are in same spot (net-worth wise) as option 1      * however at this point, you have a lower outstanding loan balance which means that you will accrue less interest in the next month        * interest is technically a liability, even though it is a good liability in the inflationary environment that we have now      * therefore, above and beyond option 1, we are also decreasing our liability every month (monthly mortgage payment will stay thesame contractually, but mortgage will be paid off faster so there will be many terms of a $0 payment)        * decreasing a liability by y increases your net worth by y, therefore option 2 increases your net worth by x + y, whereas option 1 increases your net worth by x only* when looking at it from the initial condition of already having the asset and cashflow, it is like you are investing your excess cash in reducing your mortgage and getting a return of 3% on cash invested as opposed to just consuming your cash flow* this seems to be like investing profits for a 3% return, which would be like a conservative bond yield* I think it might make sense to invest in a stock-market index fund at 7-10% during the interim (except that you take on more risk and will pay taxes), until you have enough for a down payment that you can pull out and reinvest in more property  * of course, when reinvesting into paying down mortgage, there are no capital gains and also no risk, so that might make it just as good to do that* the short answer I think is that you are either using your cash flow (from previous real estate, stocks, job, or whatever) to consume (spend on stuff you want that keep net worth same or decrease it, but not make you more cashflow) or spend that cashflow on things that increase your net worth and/or pay you cash flow  * then paying down a mortgage that reduces payments by 3% is like buying a bond that returns 3% with no taxes (because overpaying a mortgage isn't taxed, and bond yields are) * continually doing this is like funneling your excess profits from other stuff back into your 3% tax-free bond-yield* the problem is that you lose this avenue when the loan balance actually hits $0, which is why long before this point, you actually refi, take out enough for a down payment to get another re investment working in parallel, then use both mortgages on properties as tax-free 3% bond yields (taking out another mortgage introduces a compounding effect here as well, beyond the 3% return)  * this would be like selling your bond portfolio with no capital gains taxes (bc refis/loans are tax-free, even though you pay some closing costs), buying as much re as you can with down payments, and "buying more bonds - which are actually your mortgages" such that your bond portfolio increases (because your LTVs on mortgages are higher) and you magically get a house out of the deal (and did I mention no taxes) * then rinse repeat* long-story short, I think that it might actually be a next-level genius strategy, after all* this is either the smartest thing I've heard in the past year or I'm completely chasing my tail* can someone poke holes in this?
Rich Weese Contrarian view for real estate ownership. Life long investor.
25 June 2019 | 17 replies
Their birth rate has dropped to 1.44 over the past several decades and that is compounding their problem exponentially.5.
JASON CHOI Turnkey or Properties with some minor rehab?
20 June 2019 | 10 replies
I personally shoot for more cash flow to get the compound affect going .
Sarah Cowns looking for advice, starting out
30 November 2018 | 11 replies
You can learn that here, and you'll find most folks on BP are extremely helpful and won't make you pay $1000 for the privilege of listening to them talk ;) That money could be put to better use paying off debt, and then building your downpayment savings.You maybe don't have a leg up the way some folks do when they start REI, but you aren't in a bad position, just a transitional one.